This article draws upon three theoretical arguments to frame the ideological nature of global intellectual property rights. The first is the work of Robert Merges on the justification of intellectual property rights. The second work is the work of the early 20th-century American legal scholar Wesley Hohfeld and his theory on "conceptions of property". The third work is that of John Rawls and his approach to "pluralism". These works have a common theme in that they help to frame or conceptualise intellectual property rights in the certain ideological existence that I argue. The article explains that this ideological existence relates to how intellectual property rights are supported at the global level as instruments of private property gove...
As an introduction to the inaugural issue of the new WIPO Journal, this essay highlights some of the...
Intellectual property rights (IPRs) have become a key element in national strategies of technologica...
It is a challenge for the United States to adequately protect the interests of its intellectual prop...
Book review of Intellectual Property Rights in the Global Economy by Keith E. Maskus and published b...
Intellectual property has become the apple of discord in today’s moral and political debates. Althou...
This book argues that we should adopt an instrumentalist approach to intellectual property and rejec...
In the past, intellectual property issues were considered complex, obscure, and highly technical; th...
This article discusses Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and in particular global IPR expansion. Th...
The article discusses the relationship between the protection of intellectual property rights, human...
This paper discusses aspects of economic analysis of law developed as a result of the current status...
This article discusses Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and in particular global IPR expansion. Th...
To observe that so-called intellectual property (IP) flowered in the late twentieth century, even su...
Are intellectual property rights like other property rights? More and more of the world’s knowledge ...
Recently, scholars and commentators around the world have reexamined the role intellectual property ...
Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) have become ubiquitous in the current debate and have emerged as...
As an introduction to the inaugural issue of the new WIPO Journal, this essay highlights some of the...
Intellectual property rights (IPRs) have become a key element in national strategies of technologica...
It is a challenge for the United States to adequately protect the interests of its intellectual prop...
Book review of Intellectual Property Rights in the Global Economy by Keith E. Maskus and published b...
Intellectual property has become the apple of discord in today’s moral and political debates. Althou...
This book argues that we should adopt an instrumentalist approach to intellectual property and rejec...
In the past, intellectual property issues were considered complex, obscure, and highly technical; th...
This article discusses Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and in particular global IPR expansion. Th...
The article discusses the relationship between the protection of intellectual property rights, human...
This paper discusses aspects of economic analysis of law developed as a result of the current status...
This article discusses Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) and in particular global IPR expansion. Th...
To observe that so-called intellectual property (IP) flowered in the late twentieth century, even su...
Are intellectual property rights like other property rights? More and more of the world’s knowledge ...
Recently, scholars and commentators around the world have reexamined the role intellectual property ...
Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) have become ubiquitous in the current debate and have emerged as...
As an introduction to the inaugural issue of the new WIPO Journal, this essay highlights some of the...
Intellectual property rights (IPRs) have become a key element in national strategies of technologica...
It is a challenge for the United States to adequately protect the interests of its intellectual prop...