Global Intellectual Property Protection and New Constitutionalism: Hedging Exclusive Rights
★★★★★
★★★★★
English
The constitutionalization of intellectual property law is often framed as a benign and progressive integration of intellectual property with fundamental rights. Yet this is not a full or even an adequate picture of the ongoing constitutionalization processes affecting IP. This collection of essays, written by international experts and covering a range of different areas of intellectual property law, takes a broader approach to the process. Drawing on constitutional theory, and particularly on ideas of new constitutionalism, the chapters engage with the complex array of contemporary legal constraints on intellectual property law-making. Such constraints arising in international intellectual property law, human rights law (including human rights protection for right-holders), investment treaties, and forms of private ordering. This collection aims to illuminate the complex role of this constitutional framework, by analysing the overlaps, complementarities, and conflicts between such forms of protection and seeking to establish the effects that this assemblage of global and regional norms has on legal reform projects and interpretations of IP law. Some chapters take a broad theoretical perspective on these processes. Others focus on specific situations in which the relationship between intellectual property law and broader constitutional norms is significant. These contexts range from Art 17 of the EU's Digital Single Market Directive, to the implementation of harmonized trade secrets protection, from the role of Canada's Charter of Rights to the impact of the social model of property in Brazil.
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Product Details
Weight: 852g
Dimensions: 177 x 252mm
Publication Date: 26 Nov 2021
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780198863168
About
Jonathan Griffiths is Professor of Intellectual Property Law at Queen Mary University of London. His research interests lie predominantly in copyright law (particularly European copyright law) and in the relationship between intellectual property law and fundamental rights. He is the editor of the United Kingdom chapter of the leading international treatise on International Copyright Law & Practice (ed. Bently) and is a member of the editorial and advisory boards of the Journal of Media Law the Media & Arts Law Review and the Nottingham Law Journal. He is a member of the European Copyright Society a group of scholars founded with the aim of creating a platform for critical and independent scholarly thinking on European copyright law. Tuomas Mylly is Professor of Commercial Law at Faculty of Law University of Turku (Finland) and director of the IPR University Center. He has previously held a chair of European Economic Law. His research interests lie in European and global intellectual property competition and constitutional law and their interactions. His current research is focused on the historical evolution of international and European intellectual property protection and constitutional and other aspects of IP protection.