购买点数
24 点
出版社
CAMBRIDGE
出版时间
2005
ISBN
标注页数
922 页
PDF页数
937 页
标签
part Ⅰ International Provision of Public Goods under a Globalized Intellectual Property Regime 1
SECTION 1 THE CONCEPT OF PUBLIC GOODS IN THE EXPANDING KNOWLEDGE ECONOMY 1
1 The Globalization of Private Knowledge Goods and the Privatization of Global Public Goods&Keith E. Maskus and Jerome H. Reichman 3
2 The Regulation of Public Goods&Peter Drahos 46
Comment: Norms, Institutions, and Cooperation&Robert O. Keohane 65
3 Distributive Values and Institutional Design in the Provision of Global Public Goods&Peter M. Gerhart 69
SECTION 2 PRESERVING THE CULTURAL AND SCIENTIFIC COMMONS 79
4 Koyaanisqatsi in Cyberspace: The Economics of an "Out-of-Balance" Regime of Private Property Rights in Data and Information&Paul A. David 81
5 Linkages Between the Market Economy and the Scientific Commons&Richard R. Nelson 121
Comment Ⅰ: Public Goods and Public Science&Eric Maskin 139
6 Sustainable Access to Copyrighted Digital Information Works in Developing Countries&Ruth L. Okediji 142
7 Agricultural Research and Intellectual Property Rights&Robert E. Evenson 188
Comment Ⅱ: Using Intellectual Property Rights to Preserve the Global Genetic Commons: The International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture&Laurence R. Heifer 217
part Ⅱ Innovation and Technology Transfer in a Protectionist Environment 225
SECTION 1 TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER UNDER INTERNATIONAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY STANDARDS 225
8 Can the TRIPS Agreement Foster Technology Transfer to Developing Countries?&Carlos M. Correa 227
Comment Ⅰ: Technology Transfer on the International Agenda&Pedro Roffe 257
9 Patent Rights and International Technology Transfer Through Direct Investment and Licensing&Keith E. Maskus, Kamal Saggi, and Thitima Puttitanun 265
Comment Ⅱ: TRIPS and Technology Transfer - Evidence from Patent Data&Samuel Kortum 282
10 Proprietary Rights and Collective Action: The Case of Biotechnology Research with Low Commercial Value&Arti K. Rai 288
SECTION 2 STIMULATING LOCAL INNOVATION 307
11 Do Stronger Patents Induce More Local Innovation?&Lee G. Branstetter 309
12 Markets for Technology, Intellectual Property Rights, and Development&Ashish Arora, Andrea Fosfuri, and Alfonso Gambardella 321
13 Using Liability Rules to Stimulate Local Innovation in Developing Countries: Application to Traditional Knowledge&Jerome H. Reichman and Tracy Lewis 337
14 Stimulating Agricultural Innovation&Michael Blakeney 367
part Ⅲ Sectoral Issues: Essential Medicines and Traditional Knowledge 391
SECTION 1 DEVELOPING AND DISTRIBUTING ESSENTIAL MEDICINES 391
15 Managing the Hydra: The Herculean Task of Ensuring Access to Essential Medicines&Frederick M. Abbott 393
16 Theory and Implementation of Differential Pricing for Pharmaceuticals&Patricia M. Danzon and Adrian Towse 425
17 Increasing R&D Incentives for Neglected Diseases: Lessons from the Orphan Drug Act&Henry Grabowski 457
Comment: Access to Essential Medicines - Promoting Human Rights Over Free Trade and Intellectual Property Claims&Heinz Klug 481
SECTION 2 PROTECTING TRADITIONAL KNOWLEDGE 493
18 Legal and Economic Aspects of Traditional Knowledge&Graham Dutfield 495
19 Saving the Village: Conserving Jurisprudential Diversity in the International Protection of Traditional Knowledge&Antony Taubman 521
20 Legal Perspectives on Traditional Knowledge: The Case for Intellectual Property Protection&Thomas Cottier and Marion Panizzon 565
Comment: Traditional Knowledge, Folklore and the Case for Benign Neglect&David L. Lange 595
21 Protecting Cultural Industries to Promote Cultural Diversity: Dilemmas for International Policymaking Posed by the Recognition of Traditional Knowledge&Rosemary J. Coombe 599
part Ⅳ Reform and Regulation Issues 615
SECTION 1 BALANCING PUBLIC AND PRIVATE INTERESTS IN THE GLOBAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY SYSTEM 615
22 Issues Posed by a World Patent System&John H. Barton 617
23 Intellectual Property Arbitrage: How Foreign Rules Can Affect Domestic Protections&Pamela Samuelson 635
24 An Agenda for Radical Intellectual Property Reform&William Kingston 653
Comment: Whose Rules, Whose Needs? Balancing Public and Private Interests&Geoff Tansey 662
25 Diffusion and Distribution: The Impacts on Poor Countries of Technological Enforcement within the Biotechnology Sector&Timothy Swanson and Timo Goeschl 669
26 Equitable Sharing of Benefits from Biodiversity-Based Innovation: Some Reflections under the Shadow of a Neem Tree&Gustavo Ghidini 695
SECTION 2 THE ROLE OF COMPETITION LAW 707
27 The Critical Role of Competition Law in Preserving Public Goods in Conflict with Intellectual Property Rights&Josef Drexl 709
28 Expansionist Intellectual Property Protection and Reductionist Competition Rules: A TRIPS Perspective&Hanns Ullrich 726
29 Can Antitrust Policy Protect the Global Commons from the Excesses of IPRs?&Eleanor M. Fox 758
Comment Ⅰ: Competition Law as a Means of Containing Intellectual Property Rights&Carsten Fink 770
30 "Minimal" Standards for Patent-Related Antitrust Law under TRIPS&Mark D. Janis 774
Comment Ⅱ: Competitive Baselines for Intellectual Property Systems&Shnbha Ghosh 793
SECTION 3 DISPUTE SETTLEMENT AT THE WTO AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS 815
31 WTO Dispute Settlement: Of Sovereign Interests, Private Rights, and Public Goods&Joost Pauwelyn 817
32 The Economics of International Trade Agreements and Dispute Settlement with Intellectual Property Rights&Eric W. Bond 831
33 Intellectual Property Rights and Dispute Settlement in the World Trade Organization&Wilfred J. Ethier 852
34 WTO Dispute Resolution and the Preservation of the Public Domain of Science under International Law&Graeme Dinwoodie and Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss 861
35 Recognizing Public Goods in WTO Dispute Settlement: Who Participates? Who Decides? The Case of TRIPS and Pharmaceutical Patents Protection&Gregory Shaffer 884
Index 909
