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Book

Title Human rights and intellectual property rights : tensions and convergences / edited by Mpazi Sinjela
Published Leiden ; Boston : Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2007

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Location Call no. Vol. Availability
 MELB  KC 200 Sin/Hra  AVAILABLE
Description x, 290 pages ; 25 cm
Series Raoul Wallenberg Institute new authors series ; v. 2
Raoul Wallenberg Institute new authors series ; v. 2
Contents Curbing software piracy in ecommerce : compatibility with human rights : challenges and possible solutions / Md. Mahboob Murshed -- Are stronger intellectual property rights an obstacle or a condition for international technology transfer? / Anna Dahlberg -- A case study of the dual citizenship arrangement between Russia and Turkmenistan / Begench Ashirov -- Patent rights and access to medicines : are patents really the only barrier for good health care in developing countries? / Björn Ley -- The disappeared children of El Salvador-a field study of truth, justice and reparation / Christine Lagström -- What is the role of professional and civil society organisations beyond international legal mechanisms of implementing human rights treaties? / Vincents Okechukwu Benjamin -- Traditional knowledge : an analysis of the current international debate applied to the Ecuadorian Amazon context / Ester Almeida -- TRIPS and agricultural biotechnology : implications for the right to food in Africa / Jeannette Mwangi
Summary "This collection offers an overview of the issues involved concerning the interface between human rights and intellectual property rights (IPRs). It makes clear that two schools of thought have developed. The first school maintains that human rights and IPRs are in fundamental conflict. Strong protection of IP is incompatible with human rights obligations. Thus, for resolving the conflict between the two, it is suggested that human rights should always prevail over IPRs. Whereas the second school of thought asserts that human rights and IPRs pursue the same aim: that is to define the appropriate scope of private monopoly power to create incentives for authors and inventors, while ensuring that the public has adequate access to the fruits of their efforts. Accordingly, they argue, human rights and IP are compatible. However, what is needed is to strike a balance between the provision of incentives to innovate and public access to products of that innovation
This collection explores this balance and the extent to which human rights standards can influence the interpretation of IP norms, for example in defining the scope of IPRs."--BOOK JACKET
Notes Formerly CIP. Uk
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references
Subject Human rights.
Intellectual property (International law)
Author Sinjela, Mpazi.
LC no. 2007039635
ISBN 9004162909 (alk. paper)
9789004162907 (alk. paper)