In economic sectors crucial to human welfare agriculture, education, and medicine a small number of firms control global markets, primarily by enforcing intellectual property (IP) rights incorporated into trade agreements made in the 1980s onward. Such rights include patents on seeds and medicines, copyrights for educational texts, and trademarks in consumer products. According to conventional wisdom, these agreements likewise ended hopes for a 'New International Economic Order,' under which wealth would be redistributed from rich countries to poor. Sam F. Halabi turns this conventional wisdom on its head by demonstrating that the New International Economic Order never faded, but rather was redirected by other treaties, formed outside the nominally economic sphere, that protected poor countries' interests in education, health, and nutrition and resulted in redistribution and regulation. This illuminating work should be read by anyone seeking a nuanced view of how IP is shaping the global knowledge economy.
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Product Details
Weight: 370g
Dimensions: 152 x 230mm
Publication Date: 19 Apr 2018
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781316629161
About Sam F. Halabi
Sam F. Halabi is the 201718 Fulbright Research Professor in Health Law Policy and Ethics at the University of Ottawa. He is also a Scholar at the O'Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law at Georgetown University and an Associate Professor of Law at the University of Missouri. Halabi is the editor of Global Management of Infectious Disease after Ebola (2016) and Food and Drug Regulation in an Era of Globalized Markets (2015). His work is published in JAMA the Lancet and the Journal of Law Medicine and Ethics. He is also the co-chair (with Gian Luca Burci) of the Ethical Legal and Social Implications Working Group of the Global Virome Project. Halabi holds a J.D. from Harvard Law School an M.Phil. from the University of Oxford and a B.S. summa cum laude from Kansas State University.