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International Intellectual Property Law and Human Security

by Ramcharan, Robin.
Authors: SpringerLink (Online service) Physical details: XX, 324 p. online resource. ISBN: 906704900X Subject(s): Law. | Law. | International IT and Media Law, Intellectual Property Law. | Human Rights. | Public International Law.
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Introduction -- Intellectual Property and Human Security -- The International Intellectual Property Regime -- Human Security Aspects of the Intellectual Property Regime -- Imperatives of the Right to Development -- IP, Human Rights and Human Security -- A Human Security Perspective for International Business Organizations -- The Protection of Traditional Knowledge in Africa, Asia and Latin America -- The Development Agenda of WIPO -- Proposal for an International Equity Panel in WIPO -- Conclusion.

With a Foreword by Professor Gudmundur Alfredsson, former Chair of the Advisory Board of the Worldwide Academy of WIPO   This book is the first to examine the international intellectual property (IP) legal regime from the perspective of human security. The latter encompasses legal, development and human rights dimensions which, it is argued, must be integrated into the fabric of the IP regime. Fundamental human rights such as the right to life, to health and to food, which form part of an umbrella ‘right to development’, must increasingly inform the crafting of IP policies and laws at the national and international level.   The author, building on previous work on IP law and security, contributes to elucidating the multi-faceted relationship between IP and human security, which encompasses linkages between law, human rights, development and IP. The book captures the dramatic calls by developing countries and indigenous peoples for a more balanced intellectual property regime that allows for maximum use of flexibilities that cater to their developmental priorities. In this connection, the book discusses the roles of international business organizations (IBOs) and of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) in advancing a development oriented IP system. It proposes practical principles for IBO’s and it recommends the formation of an ‘International Equity Panel’ within WIPO.   This book will be of interest to IP and human rights scholars, international law and relations specialists and international security analysts, in particular those interested in non-traditional security issues. It may also serve as resource book for the international business community on developmental and human rights aspects of IP.

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