The Access Regime

Patent Law Reforms for Affordable Medicines

Price: 650.00 INR

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ISBN:

9780199463480

Publication date:

21/12/2015

Hardback

304 pages

216x140mm

Price: 650.00 INR

We sell our titles through other companies
Disclaimer :You will be redirected to a third party website.The sole responsibility of supplies, condition of the product, availability of stock, date of delivery, mode of payment will be as promised by the said third party only. Prices and specifications may vary from the OUP India site.

ISBN:

9780199463480

Publication date:

21/12/2015

Hardback

304 pages

Feroz Ali

Comprehensive examination of India's patent law regime,Explains why India took an alternate route in patent law,Details the provisions that make the Indian patent law unique,Focuses on the 'access' to affordable lifesaving medicines,Charters the course for countries awaiting to follow the Indian example

Rights:  World Rights

Feroz Ali

Description

India's post-TRIPS (Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) patent law reforms, which incorporates a remarkable array of flexibilities, is seen as a counter-harmonization measure in direct opposition to the dominant model of patent law pioneered by the United States. India's response, which represents an alternative model of confirming to the TRIPS Agreement, has seen stiff resistance in the form of counter-provisions in Free Trade Agreements entered by the United States and other countries. Historically, patent systems based on neoliberalism, like the American model, favour individual pursuits whereas patent systems based on social democracy, like the Indian model, focus on community goals. This distinction manifests in the manner in which the role of the public is defined in the patent system.

India's model is characterized by the emphasis on the public elements in three significant ways. First, in redefining pre-grant opposition by allowing public participation in questioning the ex ante validity of patents. Second, in protecting the public domain by heightening the standard of patentability and requiring the patent applicant to demonstrate technical advance and greater effectiveness of the invention. Third, in providing for compulsory licensing when the public interest is affected by a patent that is not worked locally. The influence of the India's model has come from mimicry by other countries in following the Indian example. Countries like Argentina, Philippines, Brazil, China and South Africa have either emulated or strongly favour following India's path. Such state practices might occasion the re-imagination of the TRIPS Agreement as the Access Regime.

This book explains why India took that unique route in patent law, details the provisions made the Indian patent law unique, and charters the course for countries awaiting to follow the Indian example.


About the author

Feroz Ali, Ministry of Human Resource Development Intellectual Property Rights Chair at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras

Feroz Ali is a Ministry of Human Resource Development Intellectual Property Rights Chair at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras

Feroz Ali

Table of contents

Preface
Acknowledgment
Introduction
PART 1: THE PUBLIC IN PATENT LAW
1:Patent System, Constitution and the Public
2:The Resurgence of the Public
PART 2: HOW INDIA REINSTATED THE PUBLIC IN PATENT LAW
3:Pre-grant Opposition: Ex Ante Validation of Patents
4:Heightened Standards of Patentability: Raising the Bar on Inventions
5:Compulsory Licensing: Local Working in Global Economy
PART 3: REIMAGINING THE TRIPS AS AN ACCESS REGIME
6:The Fault Lines of Harmonization
7:The Access Regime: Reimagining the TRIPS Agreement
Bibliography
Index

Feroz Ali

Feroz Ali

Feroz Ali

Description

India's post-TRIPS (Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights) patent law reforms, which incorporates a remarkable array of flexibilities, is seen as a counter-harmonization measure in direct opposition to the dominant model of patent law pioneered by the United States. India's response, which represents an alternative model of confirming to the TRIPS Agreement, has seen stiff resistance in the form of counter-provisions in Free Trade Agreements entered by the United States and other countries. Historically, patent systems based on neoliberalism, like the American model, favour individual pursuits whereas patent systems based on social democracy, like the Indian model, focus on community goals. This distinction manifests in the manner in which the role of the public is defined in the patent system.

India's model is characterized by the emphasis on the public elements in three significant ways. First, in redefining pre-grant opposition by allowing public participation in questioning the ex ante validity of patents. Second, in protecting the public domain by heightening the standard of patentability and requiring the patent applicant to demonstrate technical advance and greater effectiveness of the invention. Third, in providing for compulsory licensing when the public interest is affected by a patent that is not worked locally. The influence of the India's model has come from mimicry by other countries in following the Indian example. Countries like Argentina, Philippines, Brazil, China and South Africa have either emulated or strongly favour following India's path. Such state practices might occasion the re-imagination of the TRIPS Agreement as the Access Regime.

This book explains why India took that unique route in patent law, details the provisions made the Indian patent law unique, and charters the course for countries awaiting to follow the Indian example.


About the author

Feroz Ali, Ministry of Human Resource Development Intellectual Property Rights Chair at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras

Feroz Ali is a Ministry of Human Resource Development Intellectual Property Rights Chair at the Indian Institute of Technology Madras

Table of contents

Preface
Acknowledgment
Introduction
PART 1: THE PUBLIC IN PATENT LAW
1:Patent System, Constitution and the Public
2:The Resurgence of the Public
PART 2: HOW INDIA REINSTATED THE PUBLIC IN PATENT LAW
3:Pre-grant Opposition: Ex Ante Validation of Patents
4:Heightened Standards of Patentability: Raising the Bar on Inventions
5:Compulsory Licensing: Local Working in Global Economy
PART 3: REIMAGINING THE TRIPS AS AN ACCESS REGIME
6:The Fault Lines of Harmonization
7:The Access Regime: Reimagining the TRIPS Agreement
Bibliography
Index