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The Economic Characteristics of Developing Jurisdictions: Their
Implications for Competition Law contributes to the ongoing debate
over what type of competition law and policy is most suitable for
developing jurisdictions. Concluding that one competition model
does not fit all socio-economic contexts, the book frames an
alternative vision of competition rules for developing nations. A
number of different factors that influence the implementation of
competition law in developing countries are analysed, such as the
content and goals of such laws, the institutional features, and the
political, ideological and legal conditions that must complement
law and policy. Experts in the fields of development economics and
competition law discuss the key economic features that characterize
most developing jurisdictions, determine how these unique
characteristics influence law and policy and define how this must
translate into competition law. Through this interdisciplinary
exploration, the book illustrates how unique characteristics of
developing jurisdictions matter when enforcing competition law.
Scholars interested in development economics and law and
development will find this an informative addition to the
discussion surrounding competition law in developed and developing
countries. Practitioners and policy makers will find practical
insight into how traditional approaches to designing competition
law must be revised for the future.
This book presents a detailed study of the interface between
regional integration and competition policies of selected regional
trade agreements (RTAs), and the potential of regional competition
laws to help developing countries achieve their development goals.
The book provides insights on the regional integration experiences
in developing countries, their potential for development and the
role of competition law and policy in the process. Moreover, the
book emphasizes the development dimension both of regional
competition policies and of competition law. This timely book
delivers concrete proposals that will help to unleash the potential
of regional integration and regional competition policies, and also
help developing countries to fully enjoy the benefits deriving from
a regional market. Bringing together analysis from well-known
scholars in the developed world with practical insight from
scholars in countries hoping to exploit the potential of
competition law, this book will appeal to academics working in the
field of competition law, practitioners, policy makers and
officials from developing countries, as well as those in
development organizations such as UNCTAD.
Intellectual property (IP) rights impact innovation in diverse
ways. This book critically analyses whether additional rights
beyond patents, trademarks and copyrights are needed to promote
innovation. Featuring contributions from thought-leaders in the
field of IP, this book examines the check and balances that already
exist in the IP system to safeguard innovation and questions to
what extent existing IP regimes are capable of catering to new
paradigms of innovation and creativity. Taking a multi-angled view
of the topic, this book questions whether IP rights by definition
encourage innovation and explores the role of exceptions and
limitations to IP rights as well as the application of competition
law to promote innovation. Chapters analyse diverse topics within
the field of IP such as plant varieties protection, geographical
indications and 3D printing. Taken as a whole this book advocates
that a pro-innovation rationale must be applied when new IP
legislation is designed. This book will be an engaging source of
information for researchers and policy-makers with an interest in
the direction of IP legislation and the promotion of innovation. It
will also be relevant for scholars of competition law who are
seeking information on the relationship between competition and IP.
This new book addresses important current problems and challenges
arising from a large variety of state-initiated restraints. Beyond
state-owned enterprises, rules on government procurement and the
control of state subsidies, the contributions also analyse forms of
regulation that either distort competition or manage to introduce
competition in the market. The contributions of leading competition
law scholars cover state-initiated restraints of competition in
many jurisdictions, including the US, the EU, Australia, and Asian
and Latin American countries. Competition and trade law scholars
will find this book both relevant and insightful. Regulators and
competition agencies, representatives of international
organizations and competition law practitioners will also find this
to be an invaluable resource of information from which they can
take new inspiration.
This comprehensive Handbook brings together contributions from
American, Canadian, European, and Japanese writers to better
explore the interface between competition and intellectual property
law. Issues range from the fundamental to the specific, each
considered from the angle of cartels, dominant positions, and
mergers. Topics covered include, among others, technology
licensing, the doctrine of exhaustion, network industries,
innovation, patents, and copyright. Appropriate space is devoted to
the latest developments in European and American antitrust law,
such as the 'more economic approach' and the question of
anti-competitive abuses of intellectual property rights. Each
original chapter reflects extensive comments by all other
contributors, an approach which ensures a diversity of perspectives
within a systematic framework. These cutting edge articles will be
of great interest to law professors and postgraduate students of
intellectual property and competition law, as well as those
interested in innovation and competition theory, and legal
practices in intellectual property and competition law.
To what extent should competition agencies act as market
regulators? Competition Law as Regulation provides numerous
insights from competition scholars on new trends at the interface
of competition law and sector-specific regulation. By relying on
the experiences of a considerable number of different
jurisdictions, and applying a comparative approach to the topic,
this book constitutes an important addition to international
research on the interface of competition and regulation. It
addresses the fundamental issues of the subject, and contributes to
legal theory and practice. Topics discussed include foundations of
the complex relationship of competition law and regulation, new
forms of advocacy powers of competition agencies, competition law
enforcement in regulated industries in general, information and
telecommunications markets, and competition law as regulation in
IP-related markets. Scholars in the two fields of law and economics
will find the research aspects of the book to be of interest.
Officials in competition and regulatory agencies will benefit from
the practical relevance of the book.
This outstanding collection of original essays brings together some
of the leading experts in competition economics, policy and law.
They examine what lies at the core of the 'economic approach to
competition law' and deal with its normative and institutional
limitations. In recent years the 'more economic approach' has led
to a modernisation of competition law throughout the world. This
book comprehensively examines for the first time, the foundations
and limitations of the approach and will be of great interest to
scholars of competition policy no matter what discipline.
Competition Policy and the Economic Approach will appeal to
academics in competition economics and law, policy-makers and
practitioners in the field of antitrust/competition law as well as
postgraduate students in competition law and economics. Those
interested in the interplay of law and economics in the field of
competition will also find this book invaluable.
This book examines the impact and shortcomings of the TRIPS
Agreement, which was signed in Marrakesh on 15 April 1994. Over the
last 20 years, the framework conditions have changed fundamentally.
New technologies have emerged, markets have expanded beyond
national borders, some developing states have become global
players, the terms of international competition have changed, and
the intellectual property system faces increasing friction with
public policies. The contributions to this book inquire into
whether the TRIPS Agreement should still be seen only as part of an
international trade regulation, or whether it needs to be
understood - or even reconceptualized - as a framework regulation
for the international protection of intellectual property. The
purpose, therefore, is not to define the terms of an outright
revision of the TRIPS Agreement but rather to discuss the framework
conditions for an interpretative evolution that could make the
Agreement better suited to the expectations and needs of today's
global economy.
The relationship between intellectual property and private
international law is a fascinating and multi-faceted one. Both
fields are inherently international, but it is the exponential
increase in conflicts involving trans-border elements, in a world
characterised by global trade and borderless communication
structures, that has, in modern times, drawn the two disciplines
close. The essays contained in this book, first presented at a
Symposium in Munich, set out possible visions for a future system
of international and regional jurisdiction and applicable law that
is better adapted to the increasingly supranational character of IP
rights. A second feature of the book is its treatment of
'harmonisation' of choice-of-law issues. Framed by these two
elements - international jurisdiction on the one hand and
perspectives for harmonised choice of law rules in an international
context on the other - specific European themes are also addressed;
jurisdiction, the establishment of a European judiciary in the
patent field, the relationship between regional (European) systems
and an international jurisdiction convention, and the recent
proposal for a Regulation on applicable law in non-contractual
relationships (Rome II).
Privacy today is much debated as an individual's right against real
or feared intrusions by the state, as exemplified by proposed
identity cards and surveillance measures in the United Kingdom. In
contrast, invasions of privacy by private individuals or bodies
tend to arouse less concern. This book attempts to fill the gap by
looking at the horizontal application of human rights after Douglas
v Hello, Campbell v MGN and Caroline von Hannover v Germany. It
provides a conceptual and theoretical framework and also considers
specific particularly sensitive areas of law relating to privacy
protection, such as intellectual property, employment and media
law. It provides comparative perspectives by relating Article 8 of
the European Convention on Human Rights, which serves as a focal
point, to UK, Dutch, German and European Communities law. Several
common threads are revealed running across jurisdictions and
different areas of law and aspects of privacy. The most notable is
the definition of privacy in terms of the autonomy of the
individual, a notion associated with the liberal state in the
classic sense but now acquiring more content as a human right also
linked to ideas of social justice.
This book focuses on a new generation of bilateral and regional
agreements negotiated by the EU with developing countries and which
include intellectual property (IP) provisions setting standards
exceeding those of the TRIPS Agreement. The contributions
critically analyse the IP standards found in these agreements;
their potential for reforming the international IP system; the
implications for the multilateral IP system and other areas of
international law such as human rights; and the often neglected
topic of implementing the IP obligations in these agreements.
This book focuses on a new generation of bilateral and regional
agreements negotiated by the EU with developing countries and which
include intellectual property (IP) provisions setting standards
exceeding those of the TRIPS Agreement. The contributions
critically analyse the IP standards found in these agreements;
their potential for reforming the international IP system; the
implications for the multilateral IP system and other areas of
international law such as human rights; and the often neglected
topic of implementing the IP obligations in these agreements.
This book examines the impact and shortcomings of the TRIPS
Agreement, which was signed in Marrakesh on 15 April 1994. Over the
last 20 years, the framework conditions have changed fundamentally.
New technologies have emerged, markets have expanded beyond
national borders, some developing states have become global
players, the terms of international competition have changed, and
the intellectual property system faces increasing friction with
public policies. The contributions to this book inquire into
whether the TRIPS Agreement should still be seen only as part of an
international trade regulation, or whether it needs to be
understood - or even reconceptualized - as a framework regulation
for the international protection of intellectual property. The
purpose, therefore, is not to define the terms of an outright
revision of the TRIPS Agreement but rather to discuss the framework
conditions for an interpretative evolution that could make the
Agreement better suited to the expectations and needs of today's
global economy.
In the last two decades, accelerating technological progress,
increasing economic globalization and the proliferation of
international agreements have created new challenges for
intellectual property law. In this collection of articles in honor
of Professor Joseph Straus, more than 60 scholars and practitioners
from the Americas, Asia and Europe provide legal, economic and
policy perspectives on these challenges, with a particular focus on
the challenges facing the modern patent system. Among the many
topics addressed are the rapid development of specific technical
fields such as biotechnology, the relationship of exclusive rights
and competition, and the application of territorially limited IP
laws in cross-border scenarios.
This is the tenth in a series of volumes based on the annual
workshops on EU Competition Law and Policy held at the Robert
Schuman Centre of the European University Institute in Florence.
The volume reproduces the materials of the roundtable debate which
examined the interaction between competition law and intellectual
property law. The workshop participants - a group of senior
representatives of the Commission and the national competition
authorities of some EC Member States, reknowned international
academics and legal practitioners - discussed the economic and
legal issues that arise in this particular area of application of
the EC competition rules, under the following headings: 1) whether
the characteristics of intellectual property products/markets
justify special treatment under the competition rules; 2) a
critical assessment of the Block Exemption Regulation and
corresponding Guidelines recently adopted in this area of EC
competition law enforcement; 3) the specific enforcement issues
that arise in relation to patent pools and collecting societies;
and 4) specific problems related to IP in the domains of merger
control and application of Article 82 EC.
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