Advocates, activists, and academics have criticized pharmaceutical intellectual property ( pharma IP ) rights as obstacles to access to medicines for the global poor. These criticisms of pharma IP holders are frequently exceptionalist: they focus on pharma IP holders while ignoring whether others also bear obligations to assist patients in need. These others include holders of other lucrative IP rights, such as music copyrights or technology patents; firms, such as energy companies and banks, that do not rely on IP; and wealthy private individuals. Their resources could be used to aid patients by providing direct medical assistance, funding prizes or biomedical research, or purchasing pharmaceutical patents and granting rights to the disadv...
In this introduction we briefly review the literature on intellectual property rights and access to ...
The article analyses problems caused by patent evergreening in the pharmaceutical industry, with a ...
One-third of the world\u27s population lacks access to essential medicines. In the poorest parts of ...
Advocates, activists, and academics have criticized pharmaceutical intellectual property ( pharma IP...
Any system for the protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) has three main kinds of distrib...
Intellectual property (IP) protection has been blamed as one of the main sources of the public healt...
Intellectual property (IP) policy is an important structural determinant of health. Patent policy in...
In the past several years, the impact of intellectual property rights (IPRs) on access to medicines ...
Over the past fifteen years, the United States and other developed countries have employed trade agr...
Millions of people—mostly in developing countries—lack access to life-saving drugs. Righting this im...
To the extent that most people think about patents and other forms of intellectual property at all, ...
Current models of production of pharmaceuticals, particularly those dependent on intellectual proper...
This issue of Globalization and Health presents a paper by Kerry and Lee that considers the TRIPS a...
The year 2020 marks the 25th anniversary of including intellectual property rights within the larger...
To date, much of the academic and policy literature has focused on the impact of intellectual proper...
In this introduction we briefly review the literature on intellectual property rights and access to ...
The article analyses problems caused by patent evergreening in the pharmaceutical industry, with a ...
One-third of the world\u27s population lacks access to essential medicines. In the poorest parts of ...
Advocates, activists, and academics have criticized pharmaceutical intellectual property ( pharma IP...
Any system for the protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) has three main kinds of distrib...
Intellectual property (IP) protection has been blamed as one of the main sources of the public healt...
Intellectual property (IP) policy is an important structural determinant of health. Patent policy in...
In the past several years, the impact of intellectual property rights (IPRs) on access to medicines ...
Over the past fifteen years, the United States and other developed countries have employed trade agr...
Millions of people—mostly in developing countries—lack access to life-saving drugs. Righting this im...
To the extent that most people think about patents and other forms of intellectual property at all, ...
Current models of production of pharmaceuticals, particularly those dependent on intellectual proper...
This issue of Globalization and Health presents a paper by Kerry and Lee that considers the TRIPS a...
The year 2020 marks the 25th anniversary of including intellectual property rights within the larger...
To date, much of the academic and policy literature has focused on the impact of intellectual proper...
In this introduction we briefly review the literature on intellectual property rights and access to ...
The article analyses problems caused by patent evergreening in the pharmaceutical industry, with a ...
One-third of the world\u27s population lacks access to essential medicines. In the poorest parts of ...