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Book Cover
Book
Author Cornish, W. R. (William Rodolph), 1937-

Title Intellectual property : omnipresent, distracting, irrelevant? / William Cornish
Published Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2004

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 MELB  KN 111 Cor/Ipo  AVAILABLE
Description xi, 115 pages ; 23 cm
Series Clarendon law lectures
Clarendon law lectures.
Contents 1. Inventing -- 2. Creating -- 3. Branding
Summary Intellectual property rights (IPRs) are increasingly significant elements of economic policy; they are vital to developed countries in an age of global trade. Today's astounding new technologies, stemming from the digital and biotechnological revolutions, are creating new problems. In this book, William Cornish focuses upon the major dilemmas that currently enmesh the subject: the omnipresent spread of IPRs across some recent technologies, the distraction caused by rights that achieve little of their intended purpose, and the seeming irrelevance of IPRs in the face of new technolgies such as the Internet. What IPRs are good for, and what they achieve depends upon the law which defines them. There is great international, as well as national pressure for new laws, and in Europe, the EU is now the dominant force in shaping IP policy. Against this background, William Cornish surveys current arguments over legal policy in this field
Notes Includes bibliographical references and index
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Subject Intellectual property.
Author Oxford Scholarship Online.
LC no. 2004555336
ISBN 0199263078 :
OTHER TI Oxford scholarship online. http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/no2006024588