Day May 9, 2022

Research Exceptions in Comparative Copyright

[Sean Flynn, Luca Schirru, Michael Palmedo, and Andrés Izquierdo] Abstract: This Article categorizes the world’s copyright laws according to the degree to which they provide exceptions to copyright exclusivity for research uses. We classify countries based on the degree to which they have a research exception in their law that is sufficiently open to be able to permit reproduction and communications of copyrighted work needed for academic (i.e. non-commercial) text and data mining (TDM) research. We show that nearly every copyright law has at least one exception that promotes uses for research purposes. We find six different approaches to the provision of research exceptions that implicate application to TDM.

19 Vaccines as Global Public Goods: Between Life and Profit

[Katiuska King Mantilla and César Carranza Barona] Abstract: In the context of a health emergency like the COVID-19 pandemic, the global availability of and access to vaccines are imperative. This research paper provides an analysis from the perspective of international political economy, of the financing of COVID-19 vaccines and of the market strategies adopted by some of the companies that developed them. It notes that the development of vaccines was supported by substantial public funding from countries that later received preferential access to those vaccines through advance purchases. Despite such public support, the vaccines were not deemed as public goods but remained under the control of their developers.

Patent Law and 3D Printing Applications in Response to COVID-19: Exceptions to Inventor Rights

[Muhammad Zaheer Abbas] Abstract: ... This paper examines the issue of patent rights being at odds with access to critical 3D printable health technologies during COVID-19 crisis. It undertakes an in-depth analysis of the right to repair and calls for a clearer recognition of the right to repair exemption at the global level. It also evaluates the private and non-commercial use exception and proposes the use of a reasonably broad form of this exception to make it practically significant. It also considers the experimental use exception and calls upon WTO Member States to provide legislative clarity that a defence of an experimental use extends to repairs.