Not many constitutional decisions from developing countries find themselves at the center of global debate like the Indian Supreme Court’s Novartis decision invalidating the Gleevec patent. The patent was invalidated under amended Section 3(d) of the Indian Patents Act, which was amended to address some of the concerns of imbalance between the maximalist and minimalist cultures in the pharmaceutical context. Section 3(d) of the Indian Patent Act introduced a new threshold of patent eligibility for pharmaceutical innovation that requires applicants to demonstrate enhanced efficacy of their products. The objective of this Article is to get beyond the reactionary reviews of the Indian patent regime and seek a nuanced view of its doctrinal traj...
India, like many developing countries, only recently began to grant pharmaceutical product patents. ...
It has now been 20 years since the TRIPS Agreement, which established minimum standards for intellec...
LSE’s Kenneth Shadlen asks whether a recent Indian Supreme Court decision on pharmaceutical patents ...
The Swiss drug company Novartis challenged India\u27s status as the Pharmacy of the Developing Worl...
This Comment examines the history that led to India\u27s current patent system, the status of pharma...
Through the Patents (Amendment) Act of 2005, the Indian Parliament revised the Patents Act of 1970 t...
385-396Instead of the theoretical approach, this article attempts to visit the famed Section 3(d) ...
<div><p>India, like many developing countries, only recently began to grant pharmaceutical product p...
Writing in Science, LSE’s Kenneth Shadlen, Bhaven Sampat (Columbia) and Tahir Amin (Harvard) debate ...
In 2005, India amended its Patent Law to bring the country into compliance with the WTO TRIPS Agreem...
Section 3(d) of the Indian Patent Act states patentability of the product where the product can be p...
The Indian Supreme Court’s (SC) decision in Novartis v Union of India (UOI), decided earlier this ye...
This Note gives a brief overview of Indian patent law as it relates to pharmaceuticals, considers th...
285-289This Paper seeks to examine the theoretical underpinnings of The Patents Act, 1970 (Patents A...
India’s amendment to her patent regime in 20051 to introduce pharmaceutical product patents attracte...
India, like many developing countries, only recently began to grant pharmaceutical product patents. ...
It has now been 20 years since the TRIPS Agreement, which established minimum standards for intellec...
LSE’s Kenneth Shadlen asks whether a recent Indian Supreme Court decision on pharmaceutical patents ...
The Swiss drug company Novartis challenged India\u27s status as the Pharmacy of the Developing Worl...
This Comment examines the history that led to India\u27s current patent system, the status of pharma...
Through the Patents (Amendment) Act of 2005, the Indian Parliament revised the Patents Act of 1970 t...
385-396Instead of the theoretical approach, this article attempts to visit the famed Section 3(d) ...
<div><p>India, like many developing countries, only recently began to grant pharmaceutical product p...
Writing in Science, LSE’s Kenneth Shadlen, Bhaven Sampat (Columbia) and Tahir Amin (Harvard) debate ...
In 2005, India amended its Patent Law to bring the country into compliance with the WTO TRIPS Agreem...
Section 3(d) of the Indian Patent Act states patentability of the product where the product can be p...
The Indian Supreme Court’s (SC) decision in Novartis v Union of India (UOI), decided earlier this ye...
This Note gives a brief overview of Indian patent law as it relates to pharmaceuticals, considers th...
285-289This Paper seeks to examine the theoretical underpinnings of The Patents Act, 1970 (Patents A...
India’s amendment to her patent regime in 20051 to introduce pharmaceutical product patents attracte...
India, like many developing countries, only recently began to grant pharmaceutical product patents. ...
It has now been 20 years since the TRIPS Agreement, which established minimum standards for intellec...
LSE’s Kenneth Shadlen asks whether a recent Indian Supreme Court decision on pharmaceutical patents ...