The innovation society and intellectual property / edited by Josef Drexl, Anselm Kamperman Sanders. - xxv, 300 pages ; 25 cm. - European intellectual property institutes network series .

Includes bibliographical references and index.

IP expansion : the effect of new intellectual property rights on innovation -- Utility models : do they really serve national innovation strategies? / Geographical indications and innovation : what is the connection? / A need to limit the scope of intellectual property? -- An empirical approach to the public domain / A doctrine of the public domain / Free-riding on the repute on trade marks : does protection generate innovation? / The European foreign policy for intellectual property enforcement / Revisiting the patent misuse doctrine : its potential contribution to maintaining incentives for innovation / Standard-essential patents : limiting exclusivity for the sake of innovation / New paradigms of innovation in intellectual property -- Intellectual property rights and open innovation in 3D printing : a different form of exclusivity / Transformative use and user-generated content : integrating new paradigms of creativity in copyright law / Uma Suthersanen -- Is UPOV 1991 a good fit for developing countries? / Mrinalini Kochupillai -- Anke Moerland Kris Erickson, Martin Kretschmer and Dinusha Mendis -- Alexander Peukert -- Ansgar Ohly -- Xavier Seuba and Elena Dan -- Daryl Lim -- Peter Georg Picht Nari Lee -- Matthias Leistner and Verena Roder-Hiesserich Part I. -- Part II -- Part III --

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

9781789902341 (hardback)


Intellectual property.
Technology--Social aspects.

K1401 / INN