The TRIPS agreement was the most controversial outcome of the Uruguay Round, and is seen by many informed observers as a poisoned chalice for the WTO. Meir Pugatch …
Abstract Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) have become ubiquitous in the current debate and have emerged as the key issue of global innovation policy. The 'Trade Related Aspects …
S Sell, C May - Review of international political economy, 2001 - Taylor & Francis
Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) are increasingly recognized as the key economic resource of the future. This has led to considerable discussion of the Trade Related Aspects …
V Muzaka - European Journal of International Relations, 2011 - journals.sagepub.com
Intellectual property rights (IPRs) ultimately delineate the way in which knowledge is created, owned, controlled and diffused, domestically and now globally. They have always …
The end of the twentieth century was marked by a sea change in global governance in the realm of intellectual property rights (IPRs). Whereas countries historically retained …
The world economy is increasingly driven by intellectual capital: knowledge, inventions, expressions of creativity and the accumulated education, training and skills embodied in the …
In Globalising Intellectual Property Rights, Matthews looks at various aspects of the TRIPS Agreement: agenda-setting, legal interpretation, implementation, enforcement and revision …
TRIPS is the result of seven years of negotiations-from September 1986 to December 1993, as part of the Uruguay Round of Multilateral Trade Negotiations of the GATT. These …
A Lanoszka - International Political Science Review, 2003 - journals.sagepub.com
One of the major characteristics of the emerging international economic order is the treatment of intellectual property rights (iprs). Developing country Members are very …