
QUT Professor Endorses UK Push To Create Smokefree Generations
QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
Author: Peter Yu
Abstract: The WTO TRIPS Agreement has imposed unprecedented burdens on countries in the developing world. Although many developing and least developed countries continue to struggle with the Agreement’s high intellectual property protection and enforcement standards, large or populous emerging economies, such as Brazil, China, India, South Africa, Thailand, have managed to adapt the Agreement with some success. As economic and technological conditions improved, these emerging economies began to secure even greater benefits from the TRIPS-based intellectual property system, thereby initiating a self-reinforcing virtuous cycle.
Out of all emerging economies, no country provides a better illustration for a complete transformation of its intellectual property system and pharmaceutical landscape than China. This chapter therefore aims to document the country’s journey from its struggle with the TRIPS Agreement to its recent surge in the global pharmaceutical arena. It begins by recounting China’s initially reluctant effort to introduce high and externally driven intellectual property standards, including the TRIPS standards that were introduced before and shortly after the country’s accession to the WTO. The chapter then discusses China’s innovative turn, which began in the mid-2000s when its leaders made a major policy push toward the development of independent innovation. The chapter further examines the recently proposed amendments to Chinese patent law and pharmaceutical regulations. It concludes with five distinct lessons that China’s TRIPS experience has provided for the debate on the TRIPS Agreement and on access to medicines.
Citation: Yu, Peter K., From Struggle to Surge: China’s TRIPS Experience and Its Lessons for Access to Medicines (August 19, 2020). MAPPING THE THREE GENERATIONS OF STRUGGLE TO ACCESS TO MEDICINES UNDER THE TRIPS AGREEMENT, Amaka Vanni and Srividhya Ragavan, eds., Routledge, 2021, Forthcoming, Texas A&M University School of Law Legal Studies Research Paper No. 20-16, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3677329

QUT Media4th November 2025 The United Kingdom Parliament is considering a bill aimed at making smoking obsolete, which has been
Speaking at the Global Expert Network on Copyright User Rights Symposium on 16 June 2025, Professor Christophe Geiger argues for
On 25 September 2025, Professor Wend Wendland, delivered the 14th Peter Jaszi Distinguished Lecture at American University in Washington D.C..
On September 18, 2025, the Italian Senate definitively approved the country’s first comprehensive framework law on artificial intelligence (AI). The
Por Andrés Izquierdo Durante la segunda semana de agosto, fui invitado a hablar en la Feria Internacional del Libro de
By Andrés Izquierdo AI, Copyright, and the Future of Creativity: Notes from the Panama International Book FairDuring the second week
