Advocating for a world where intellectual
property law serves the public interest.

Intellectual Property and Investment Protection: A Misleading Equation

[Christophe Geiger] Without any doubt, important investments are often needed to generate creative outputs. However, the intellectual property (IP) system does not protect them as such; investments are only indirectly protected through the possibility to exploit and monetize the rights granted to a creator as a counterpart to the collective enrichment generated by the access to his new work. If

Research Exceptions in Comparative Copyright Law

[Sean Flynn, Michael Palmedo, and Andrés Izquierdo] Abstract: Recent scholarship has highlighted the positive impact on scholarship of copyright exceptions for text and data mining and of more “open” exceptions for research uses. Until now, however, there has not been a collection and categorization of the world’s copyright laws according to the degree to which they provide exceptions for research.

A Critical Appraisal of the COVID-19 TRIPS Waiver

[Peter Yu] This chapter offers a critical appraisal of the COVID-19 TRIPS waiver proposal. It begins by identifying the arguments for the waiver. It then turns to arguments against the proposal, including those made by policymakers and commentators who question the waiver's effectiveness. After documenting both sides of the debate, this chapter concludes by exploring whether we should support the

Access to Medicines and Vaccines: Implementing Flexibilities Under Intellectual Property Law

[Carlos M. Correa and Reto M. Hilty, eds.] This book is an outcome of a partnership between the Max Planck Institute (MPI) for Innovation and Competition and the South Centre, which jointly organized a Global Forum on Intellectual Property, Access to Medicine and Innovation in Munich on 9– 10 December 2019. It examines topics of particular relevance for shaping intellectual

Librarian of Congress Adopts Research-Friendly Exemptions to Section 1201

[Jonathan Band] On October 27, 2021, the Librarian of Congress issued new exemptions to the prohibition on the circumvention of technological protection measures set forth in the 17 U.S.C. 1201. Several of these exemptions adopted in the triennial section 1201 rulemaking explicitly support research activities. Moreover, the 350-page recommendation of the Register of Copyright, on which the Librarian based the

Non-Patent Intellectual Property Barriers to COVID-19 Vaccines, Treatment and Containment

[Sean Flynn, Erica Nkrumah and Luca Schirru] Abstract: As the World Trade Organization considers a proposal to waive or otherwise address intellectual property barriers to the global response to the COVID-19 pandemic, most of the attention given by scholars and policy makers has been focused on patents. The original proposals by South Africa and India, as well as the groundbreaking