Trade marks have been understood as quintessential ‘bureaucratic properties’. This article suggests that the making of trade marks has been historically influenced by bureaucratic practices of search and classification, which in turn were affected by the possibilities and limits of spatial organisation and technological means of access and storage. It shows how the organisation of access and retrieval did not only condition the possibility of conceiving new trade marks, but also served to delineate their intangible proprietary boundaries. Thereby they framed the very meaning of a trade mark. By advancing a historical analysis that is sensitive to shifts, both in actual materiality and in the administrative routines of trade mark law, the ar...
The case law on trade mark rights is arguably more sophisticated in Europe than in the US. Of course...
Trade mark law and cognitive psychology are both concerned with establishing the mental states of co...
The early decades of the 21st Century may well become known in the annals of intellectual property d...
The practice of watching trade mark applications silently emerged alongside the history of trade mar...
The paper analyses the current legislation within the UK and Europe with respect to trade mark law. ...
The central proposition of this paper is that it is no longer valid to assert that the only and prop...
This paper offers a new perspective on the “development” of the intellectual property regimes in the...
The functions theory seemed to herald the modernisation of European trade mark law through the recog...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the functional development of trade mark use from a legal and e...
Use of trade marks as internet search engine keywords Main purpose of my thesis is a comprehensive a...
This article explores, from the point of view of both law and linguistics, how far the application a...
Since the 2009 CJEU decision in L’Oréal v Bellure the idea that a brand's image is the property of t...
The Nice Agreement Concerning the International Classification of Goods and Services for the Purpose...
This report explores the problem of “cluttering” of trade mark registers. The report consists of two...
Professor Dinwoodie discusses the Territoriality of Trade Marks in a Post-National Era ; proposing ...
The case law on trade mark rights is arguably more sophisticated in Europe than in the US. Of course...
Trade mark law and cognitive psychology are both concerned with establishing the mental states of co...
The early decades of the 21st Century may well become known in the annals of intellectual property d...
The practice of watching trade mark applications silently emerged alongside the history of trade mar...
The paper analyses the current legislation within the UK and Europe with respect to trade mark law. ...
The central proposition of this paper is that it is no longer valid to assert that the only and prop...
This paper offers a new perspective on the “development” of the intellectual property regimes in the...
The functions theory seemed to herald the modernisation of European trade mark law through the recog...
The aim of this thesis is to examine the functional development of trade mark use from a legal and e...
Use of trade marks as internet search engine keywords Main purpose of my thesis is a comprehensive a...
This article explores, from the point of view of both law and linguistics, how far the application a...
Since the 2009 CJEU decision in L’Oréal v Bellure the idea that a brand's image is the property of t...
The Nice Agreement Concerning the International Classification of Goods and Services for the Purpose...
This report explores the problem of “cluttering” of trade mark registers. The report consists of two...
Professor Dinwoodie discusses the Territoriality of Trade Marks in a Post-National Era ; proposing ...
The case law on trade mark rights is arguably more sophisticated in Europe than in the US. Of course...
Trade mark law and cognitive psychology are both concerned with establishing the mental states of co...
The early decades of the 21st Century may well become known in the annals of intellectual property d...