
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
The New Zealand Ministry of Trade and Export Growth has formally announced that the CPTPP has been ratified by six countries – Australia, Canada, Singapore, New Zealand, Japan and Mexico – and will take affect on December 30. The sixth country (Australia) gave formal notification today, so the agreement will be in force among these six countries after the required 60 day period. Trade Minister David Parker told reporters “The signal that it sends to the rest of the world that there’s a new rules-based order out there in the world that people can buy into if they want as an incredibly powerful signal at this particular time.”
Brunei Darussalam, Chile, Malaysia, Peru and Vietnam have yet to ratify the agreement. The United States pulled out of the Agreement on President Trump’s first day in office (leading to the name change from Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP) to Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP). Since then, Trump has suggested he might want to re-enter it if all the countries would renegotiate it, but the response has been unenthusiastic (see more about this on Inside U.S. Trade).
After the United States left the agreements, the remaining countries removed some, but not all of the intellectual property provisions it had sought. Here is how the government of Canada describes the changes:
The CPTPP contains a comprehensive chapter on IP, which sets a regional standard for the protection and enforcement of IP rights across the Asia-Pacific region. The chapter includes provisions in almost all categories of IP rights, and builds on the framework established under existing international IP treaties.
As part of the conclusion of the CPTPP, the 11 remaining TPP parties agreed to suspend a number of provisions in the original TPP IP chapter. These suspensions serve to rebalance the IP chapter to reflect the remaining parties’ interests and priorities, and suspend the original TPP obligations in the following areas:
Mike Palmedo is the admin for infojustice.org, and he manages interdisciplinary research on copyright exceptions at American University College of Law's Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property. He has Masters degrees Economics and in International Affairs, and is an economics PhD candidate.

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