In November 2001, at the World Trade Organisation's 4th ministerial conference in Doha, the finance ministers of the world reaffirmed that governments are free to take all necessary measures to protect public health. That means that a government has a right to override patents in an "emergency". One method of doing this is through "compulsory licensing", a procedure under WTO rules whereby a government faced with a health emergency may grant a permit to produce a generic form of a crucial drug. As of April 2002, no developing country has ever instigated a compulsory licence, though in US and Europe the process is common. Despite the Doha declaration, Thailand activists and sympathetic government officials report that there has been no chang...
This article examines the movement for access to medicines in Thailand, a country that is a privileg...
This article provides the first comprehensive analysis of when compulsory licensing of patents is pe...
Access to HIV/AIDS medicines makes a huge difference to the lives of infected people and their famil...
In response to pressure from the United States, Thailand amended its Patent Act in 1992 and 1999 to ...
In response to concerns that patent protection for pharmaceuticals negatively affected world health,...
<div><h3>Background</h3><p>It is now a decade since the World Trade Organization (WTO) adopted the “...
New stringent drug patent and marketing rules being negotiated in a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) betwe...
Many advocates for using compulsory licensing (CL) for pharmaceutical patents in developing countrie...
The important relationship between pharmaceutical patents and problem of inaccessibility of medicine...
Abstract Background Between 2006 and 2008, Thailand's Ministry of Public Health (MOPH) granted gover...
French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Bataille de la Thaïlande contre les géants du taba
This material published in Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law is made available by...
International audienceWhile compulsory licensing (CL) is described in the TRIPS agreement as flexibi...
In February 1992, Thailand amended its patent law to provide patent protection for drugs. The amendm...
International audienceWhile compulsory licensing (CL) is described in the TRIPS agreement as flexibi...
This article examines the movement for access to medicines in Thailand, a country that is a privileg...
This article provides the first comprehensive analysis of when compulsory licensing of patents is pe...
Access to HIV/AIDS medicines makes a huge difference to the lives of infected people and their famil...
In response to pressure from the United States, Thailand amended its Patent Act in 1992 and 1999 to ...
In response to concerns that patent protection for pharmaceuticals negatively affected world health,...
<div><h3>Background</h3><p>It is now a decade since the World Trade Organization (WTO) adopted the “...
New stringent drug patent and marketing rules being negotiated in a Free Trade Agreement (FTA) betwe...
Many advocates for using compulsory licensing (CL) for pharmaceutical patents in developing countrie...
The important relationship between pharmaceutical patents and problem of inaccessibility of medicine...
Abstract Background Between 2006 and 2008, Thailand's Ministry of Public Health (MOPH) granted gover...
French version available in IDRC Digital Library: Bataille de la Thaïlande contre les géants du taba
This material published in Arizona Journal of International and Comparative Law is made available by...
International audienceWhile compulsory licensing (CL) is described in the TRIPS agreement as flexibi...
In February 1992, Thailand amended its patent law to provide patent protection for drugs. The amendm...
International audienceWhile compulsory licensing (CL) is described in the TRIPS agreement as flexibi...
This article examines the movement for access to medicines in Thailand, a country that is a privileg...
This article provides the first comprehensive analysis of when compulsory licensing of patents is pe...
Access to HIV/AIDS medicines makes a huge difference to the lives of infected people and their famil...