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Patent and Trade Disparities in Developing Countries

✍ Scribed by Srividhya Ragavan


Publisher
Oxford University Press
Year
2012
Tongue
English
Leaves
416
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


For developing countries, the concept of sustainable development, as opposed to rapid pockets of development, embodies great promise for socio-political reasons. Most analyses of development, however, have focused on either trade mechanisms or intellectual-property regimes, which has resulted
in overly narrow and sometimes paradoxical conclusions, with corresponding policy measures that have promised far more than they can deliver. While each of these mechanisms has benefits and disadvantages, questions about how they would interact and what kind of results they produce remain largely
unexplored. Similarly, almost all of these regimes provide generalized solutions that developing countries tend to denounce as ill-fitting. There are several flexibilities that can be used as effective tools, but knowing which flexibility applies best to what context remains contentious. In Patent
and Trade Disparities in Developing Countries, Srividhya Ragavan examines the interaction between trade and intellectual property regimes (using the patent regime in India as the focal point) in an integrated developmental framework to determine whether and how sustainable economic growth can be
achieved in developing countries. This book examines a number of important questions: Is compulsory licensing the best way to provide access to medication or is patent protection more efficient? Should innovation in plant breeding be protected at all? If so, should it be using patents or a sui
generis mechanism?

✦ Table of Contents


Cover
Contents
Foreword
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. Correlation Between Patents and Development: Lessons From History
2. The Unequals: National Realities and Patent Regimes of the Developing World
3. The International Trade Regime in Perspective
4. The Poor Nations Harmonize
5. The Missing Piece of the TRIPS Puzzle: Procedural Mechanisms
6. TRIPS Patent Regime: The Poverty Penalty
7. Is A Substantive Regime Adequate to Generate Full Compliance? The Biotechnology Debate
8. Dying to Dineβ€”The Story of the Great Agricultural Barrier
9. The Debate on Plant Variety Protection
10. Harvesting Poverty: The PBR Story in a Subsidy Plot
11. Biodiversity: The Third but Ignored Paradigm of the Trade Regime
12. Can the Trade Regime Lead to Sustainable Development?
INDEX
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
R
S
T
U
V
W
Y
Z


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