This issue of Globalization and Health presents a paper by Kerry and Lee that considers the TRIPS agreement and the recent policy debate regarding the protection of public health interest, particularly as they pertain to the Doha Declaration. In this editorial, we consider the debate, the conclusions thereof, and identify five questions that should be considered by key stakeholders in ongoing discussions
The coming into force of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRI...
Millions of people—mostly in developing countries—lack access to life-saving drugs. Righting this im...
Intellectual property (IP) protection has been blamed as one of the main sources of the public healt...
This issue of Globalization and Health presents a paper by Kerry and Lee that considers the TRIPS ag...
The World Health Organization has once declared antiretroviral therapy a state of global emergency. ...
In 2001 the Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health (‘Doha Declaration’), affirmed the ...
BACKGROUND: The World Trade Organisation's Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health (kno...
Over the past fifteen years, the United States and other developed countries have employed trade agr...
In this introduction we briefly review the literature on intellectual property rights and access to ...
Access to medicines is a human right, enshrined in legally binding international human rights treati...
This article critically analyzes the agreement implementing Paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration. The...
The concept of public healthcare has perennially involved the institution of measures that are neces...
This paper explores the tortured history of developing countries’ pursuit of access to affordable ge...
In order to address the immense public health inequity in trade and patent law practices, the World ...
The price of medicines is one of the main barriers to treatment access for many poor people in devel...
The coming into force of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRI...
Millions of people—mostly in developing countries—lack access to life-saving drugs. Righting this im...
Intellectual property (IP) protection has been blamed as one of the main sources of the public healt...
This issue of Globalization and Health presents a paper by Kerry and Lee that considers the TRIPS ag...
The World Health Organization has once declared antiretroviral therapy a state of global emergency. ...
In 2001 the Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health (‘Doha Declaration’), affirmed the ...
BACKGROUND: The World Trade Organisation's Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health (kno...
Over the past fifteen years, the United States and other developed countries have employed trade agr...
In this introduction we briefly review the literature on intellectual property rights and access to ...
Access to medicines is a human right, enshrined in legally binding international human rights treati...
This article critically analyzes the agreement implementing Paragraph 6 of the Doha Declaration. The...
The concept of public healthcare has perennially involved the institution of measures that are neces...
This paper explores the tortured history of developing countries’ pursuit of access to affordable ge...
In order to address the immense public health inequity in trade and patent law practices, the World ...
The price of medicines is one of the main barriers to treatment access for many poor people in devel...
The coming into force of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRI...
Millions of people—mostly in developing countries—lack access to life-saving drugs. Righting this im...
Intellectual property (IP) protection has been blamed as one of the main sources of the public healt...