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The TRIPS Regime of Patent Rights
註釋To varying degrees, nations worldwide are at present struggling to meet their obligations under the World Trade Organization (WTO) Agreement on Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS).This agreement, which to a large extent supersedes all previous international conventions on intellectual property rights, promises to provide virtually global protection against fraud, piracy, and infringement for owners of patents, copyrights, trade marks, and trade secrets--provided government officials everywhere implement its requirements. It is with the intent of facilitating such compliance--focusing on patents--that this extremely practical book has been written. With the authoritative stamp of a leading international functionary in the field--formerly with the WTO and currently with the Secretariat of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)--it articulates with unmatched clarity the specific steps a government must take, in a wide variety of possible contexts, to ensure its patent-related obligations under TRIPS are met. The presentation is arranged in an article-by-article format, following the TRIPS Agreement itself as it relates to patents. It makes no attempt to discuss what the Agreement should be, but only what it is. Effective implementation and compliance is the author's sole concern. Among the complex questions the book answers in depth are the following: How does the 'no less favourable treatment' standard apply in specific situations? Where is the line drawn between most-favoured-nation treatment and national treatment? When does exhaustion occur? How is the necessity test met? The complexity of the TRIPS Agreement and its numerous links to areas that are outside intellectual property--such as the environment and public health, human rights, and non-tariff barriers to trade--make it very difficult to apprehend all the aspects and implications of the Agreement, let alone to convert all TRIPS obligations into national law. For these reasons and more, The TRIPS Regime of Patent Rights is a crucially important resource for lawyers and government officials everywhere charged with the implementation of TRIPS obligations. ' In conclusion this book can be strongly recommended for its clear exposition of the meaning of the various articles of the TRIPs Agreement and for the short and clear discussions it gives of the historical and economic background of patents and some of the controversial and topical issues concerned with public health and patents. ' David Rogers