Written for a special issue on intellectual property and geography, this article outlines three sets of mismatches that demonstrate the vitality, utility and richness of analyzing intellectual property developments through a geographical lens. The article begins by examining economic geography, focusing on the tensions and conflicts between territorial borders and sub-national innovation (including those relating to obligations under the WTO TRIPS Agreement). This article then examines the oft-found mismatch between political geography and cultural geography. Illustrating this mismatch is the challenge of protecting traditional knowledge and traditional cultural expressions. The article concludes by exploring the growing mismatch between le...
Extract: Traditionally, intellectual property lawmaking is a matter of domestic affairs. Without ext...
PhD ThesisTaiwan is facing a GI conundrum, symptoms of which are conceptual confusion between GIs an...
Rules regulating access to knowledge are no longer the exclusive province of lawyers and policymaker...
Written for a special issue on intellectual property and geography, this article outlines three sets...
Although geography has had an important and lasting impact on the development of intellectual proper...
This book brings together articles by leading international scholars from diverse disciplinary persp...
This dissertation explores how Intellectual Property regimes and information markets shape each othe...
This volume, edited by renowned intellectual property scholars, fills a gap in the literature by foc...
In a recent case before the World Trade Organization, the European Union advocated robust protection...
Book review of Intellectual Property Rights in the Global Economy by Keith E. Maskus and published b...
This chapter addresses the relationship between intellectual property rights (IPRs) and trade throug...
This work responds to the increasing need in many countries to better understand linkages between in...
Not even three decades ago, Geographical Indications (GIs) were a niche subject. Scholarship on the ...
This Article considers, first, available economic, social, and cultural analyses of the impact of in...
Recently, scholars and commentators around the world have reexamined the role intellectual property ...
Extract: Traditionally, intellectual property lawmaking is a matter of domestic affairs. Without ext...
PhD ThesisTaiwan is facing a GI conundrum, symptoms of which are conceptual confusion between GIs an...
Rules regulating access to knowledge are no longer the exclusive province of lawyers and policymaker...
Written for a special issue on intellectual property and geography, this article outlines three sets...
Although geography has had an important and lasting impact on the development of intellectual proper...
This book brings together articles by leading international scholars from diverse disciplinary persp...
This dissertation explores how Intellectual Property regimes and information markets shape each othe...
This volume, edited by renowned intellectual property scholars, fills a gap in the literature by foc...
In a recent case before the World Trade Organization, the European Union advocated robust protection...
Book review of Intellectual Property Rights in the Global Economy by Keith E. Maskus and published b...
This chapter addresses the relationship between intellectual property rights (IPRs) and trade throug...
This work responds to the increasing need in many countries to better understand linkages between in...
Not even three decades ago, Geographical Indications (GIs) were a niche subject. Scholarship on the ...
This Article considers, first, available economic, social, and cultural analyses of the impact of in...
Recently, scholars and commentators around the world have reexamined the role intellectual property ...
Extract: Traditionally, intellectual property lawmaking is a matter of domestic affairs. Without ext...
PhD ThesisTaiwan is facing a GI conundrum, symptoms of which are conceptual confusion between GIs an...
Rules regulating access to knowledge are no longer the exclusive province of lawyers and policymaker...