Exhausting Intellectual Property Rights
A Comparative Law and Policy Analysis
Shubha Ghosh author Irene Calboli author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:8th Nov '18
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Provides an in-depth assessment of the exhaustion doctrine and explores how its various implementations have shaped international trade issues.
This book appeals to a broad range of researchers and practitioners whose work engages with intellectual property and international trade. Lawyers, economists, international relation specialists, and policymakers will find much of value in this book, especially those wanting to learn more about comparative and international law.Even as globalization seems to be in retreat in political circles, the march of commercialization and markets continues. Government policies, whether tariffs, exits, or walls, cannot impede the competitive drive to meet consumer demand for products and services, whether within national boundaries or across them. In the sphere of intellectual property rights, the doctrine of exhaustion serves to limit the rights of intellectual property owners after a specific exercise of some or all of the rights. This volume provides an assessment of the successes and failures of the exhaustion doctrine as it has been applied through recent judicial decisions in the United States and the European Union. Irene Calboli and Shubha Ghosh explore how evolving interpretations of the exhaustion doctrine affects the large trade in gray market products and other international trade issues. A comparative approach to exhaustion, Exhausting Intellectual Property Rights offers a unique discussion of the often overlooked issue of overlapping rights.
'A first-rate transnational survey on the exhaustion question addressing a range of critical issues.' Frederick Abbott, Edward Ball Eminent Scholar Professor of Law, Florida State University College of Law
'Great achievement by two prominent scholars! Drawing on case law, comparative law and clear examples and implications, Calboli and Ghosh have produced a first-class analysis of the intricacies of the key questions and the policies underlying the choice of exhaustion regime. Its comprehensive analysis of different IP regimes and the enlightening interactions with international trade, the digital environment, competition law, makes this instructive and attractively written book a must for policy makers, professionals and academics.' Pedro Roffe, Senior Fellow, International Center for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD)
'This book addresses the most important feature of intellectual property rights from the perspective of international trade. Discussing a range of exhaustion topics - from recent changes in the US law of exhaustion to the challenges of exhaustion in the digital realm - Professors Ghosh and Calboli share their vast knowledge of comparative intellectual property law and offer a thoughtful overview of the complex landscape of the exhaustion principle.' Marketa Trimble, Samuel S. Lionel Professor of Intellectual Property Law, William S. Boyd School of Law, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
"The authors have given us an invaluable treatise covering both the legal and economic aspects of the complex subject of parallel imports and the doctrine of exhaustion of intellectual property rights. This book - which is very readable - should be an essential resource for intellectual property scholars from the disciplines of both law and economics.' Jayashree Watal, Counsellor, Intellectual Property, Government Procurement and Competition Division, World Trade Organization
ISBN: 9781107115859
Dimensions: 236mm x 156mm x 17mm
Weight: 440g
226 pages