Professor Port provides a comment on Marshall A. Leaffer\u27s article that offers another viewpoint on the important issue of the globalization process and trademark law. Rather than seeking ideals of international trademark laws through harmonization, Professor Port suggests that a better objective is internationalization. Professor Port explains that harmonization of international trademark law will be impossible as long as world communities adhere to territorial justifications for sovereignty and jurisdiction. Because goods flow in the reality of an international market, Professor Port reasons that initiatives to avoid inefficiencies and uncertainties of global trademark laws should be directed toward internationalization
The world of global trademarks can be characterized in terms of three major shifts: first, a shift f...
Currently, U.S. trademark and copyright law both adopt employ a regime of international exhaustion o...
This Article explores the intricate relationship between the exercise of trademark rights and the fr...
Professor Port provides a comment on Marshall A. Leaffer\u27s article that offers another viewpoint ...
Professor Leaffer discusses how the globalization process has forced evolution of international norm...
A new international trademark jurisprudence is currently in formation that has negative impact on in...
It has been observed that international choice of law in trademark disputes reveals a tension betwee...
As the modern business world becomes increasingly decentralized and globally focused, traditional in...
In an ever-more interconnected world, it becomes increasingly important for a business to protect it...
The world has become a global village in which the medium is the message. \u27 A business engaged...
It is an axiomatic principle of domestic and international trademark law that trademarks and tradema...
Trade in goods and services has historically resisted territorial confinement, but trademark protect...
Globalization of the world has forced the evolution of international norms. Never before has the wor...
The world of global trademarks can be characterized in terms of three major shifts: first, a shift f...
Currently, U.S. trademark and copyright law both adopt employ a regime of international exhaustion o...
This Article explores the intricate relationship between the exercise of trademark rights and the fr...
Professor Port provides a comment on Marshall A. Leaffer\u27s article that offers another viewpoint ...
Professor Leaffer discusses how the globalization process has forced evolution of international norm...
A new international trademark jurisprudence is currently in formation that has negative impact on in...
It has been observed that international choice of law in trademark disputes reveals a tension betwee...
As the modern business world becomes increasingly decentralized and globally focused, traditional in...
In an ever-more interconnected world, it becomes increasingly important for a business to protect it...
The world has become a global village in which the medium is the message. \u27 A business engaged...
It is an axiomatic principle of domestic and international trademark law that trademarks and tradema...
Trade in goods and services has historically resisted territorial confinement, but trademark protect...
Globalization of the world has forced the evolution of international norms. Never before has the wor...
The world of global trademarks can be characterized in terms of three major shifts: first, a shift f...
Currently, U.S. trademark and copyright law both adopt employ a regime of international exhaustion o...
This Article explores the intricate relationship between the exercise of trademark rights and the fr...