<span>While intellectual property rights are mostly studied in isolation, in practice the legal categories created to protect these rights provide only partial legal coverage of the broader context in which such rights are created, used, and enforced. Consequently, often multiple IP rights overlap w
Overlapping Intellectual Property Rights
โ Scribed by Neil Wilkof (editor), Shamnad Basheer (editor)
- Publisher
- Oxford University Press
- Year
- 2012
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 599
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Providing a comprehensive and systematic commentary on the nature of overlapping Intellectual Property rights and their place in practice, this book is a major contribution to the way that IP is understood. IP rights are mostly studied in isolation, yet in practice each of the legal categories created to protect IP rights will usually only provide partial legal coverage of the broader context in which such rights are actually created, used, and enforced. Consequently, often multiple IP rights may overlap, in whole or in part, with respect to the same underlying subject matter. Some patterns, for instance, in addition to being protected from copying under the design rights regime, may also be distinctive enough to warrant trade mark protection.
Each chapter addresses a discrete pair of IP rights and is written by a specialist in that area. Facilitating an understanding of how and when those rights may be encountered in practice, each chapter is introduced by a hypothetical situation setting out the overlap discussed in the chapter. The conceptual and practical issues arising from this situation are then discussed, providing practitioners with a full understanding of the overlap.
Also included is a valuable summary table setting out the legal position for each set of overlapping rights in jurisdictions across Europe, Central and South America, and Asia, and the differences between them.
โฆ Table of Contents
Preface
Contents
List of Contributors
Table of Cases
Tables of Legislation
Introduction
1. Navigating the Interface between Utility Patents and Copyrights โข Andrew P. Bridges
2. The Overlap between Patent and Design Protection โข David Musker
3. Patents and Trade Secrets โข Lionel Bently
4. Interfaces in Plant Intellectual Property โข Mark D. Janis
5. Patents and Utility Models โข Robert Harrison
6. Patents and Regulatory Data Exclusivity for Medicinal Products โข Duncan Curley and Marleen H.J. van den Horst
7. When Copyright and Trademark Rights Overlap โข Craig S. Mende and Belinda Isaac
8. The Design/Copyright Overlap: Is There a Resolution? โข Sam Ricketson and Uma Suthersanen
9. Overlapping Forms of Protection for Databases โข Jonathan Band and Brandon Butler
10. Moral Rights or Economic Rights? โข Mira T. Sundara Rajan
11. Protection of โFamousโ Marks under Trademark Law and Passing Off โข David Llewelyn
12. Overlapping Rights in Designs, Trademarks, and Trade Dress โข Alan S. Nemes and Anna Carboni
13. Overlaps between Trademarks and Geographical Indications โข Dev S. Gangjee
14. Domain Names and Trademarks โข Mark V.B. Partridge
15. Publicity Rights, Trademark Rights, and Property Rights โข Sheldon W. Halpern
16. The Relationship between Trademark Rights and Unfair Competition Law โข Axel Nordemann and Tara Mooney Aaron
17. The Relationship between Intellectual Property Rights and Competition Laws โข Thomas C. Vinje and Ashwin van Rooijen
Comparison Tables
Australia
Brazil
Canada
China
France
Germany
India
Israel
Japan
Korea
Mexico
Netherlands
Russia
Singapore
South Africa
Turkey
United Arab Emirates
Index
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Intellectual property rights, conventionally seen as quite distinct, are increasingly overlapping with one another. There are several reasons for this: the expansion of IPRs beyond their traditional borders, the creation of new IPRs especially at EU level, the exploitation of gaps in the law by shre
<P>Intellectual property rights and their overlaps are considered in light of rights purposes, relying on the concept of a balance of rights as the measuring rod for assessment of the consequences resulting from the exercise of overlapping rights. Identifying the complex interface between different