"This book highlights the special issues arising in obtaining, commercialising, enforcing or attacking intellectual property rights (including protection of regulatory data) in the pharmaceutical, biotechnology and chemical industries across the world's key jurisdictions. It is unique in presenting topic matter horizontally by subject to facilitate comparison between country practices.
The first two chapters give a general introduction to the differences between the jurisdictions and an overview of some of the key concepts in patent law. The remainder of the book is dedicated to a detailed analysis of the major legal issues arising in these areas of technology.
Each component chapter has a comparative introduction, looking at the variances in the laws of different domains, followed by side-by-side analysis of the relevant regimes, including tables and flow-charts which summarise and explain the key legal concepts. The jurisdictions covered are the United States, Europe (UK, Germany, Netherlands, France and Italy), Japan, Canada, Australia, India and China".As is to be expected, supplementary protection certificate and patent terms extension issues are covered.
The publishers offer a sample chapter, this being the one on Infringing Acts and 'Literal Infringement', which you can peruse here at your leisure.
The SPC Blog is pleased to announce that it is sitting on a spare copy of this magnum opus, which it is offering as a prize. As mentioned, the book covers 12 major jurisdictions. Your task is to state which country should be included in the second edition as the 13th jurisdiction, explaining in not more than 30 words why it should be included. Please email your answer to The SPC Blog here, with the subject line "Bucknell Book". Entries should be received by not later than midnight (BST) on Sunday 24 July.
Bibliographical data. Hardback, 2 volumes, 2,536 pages. ISBN 978-0-19-928901-1. Price £295.00. Book's web page here.
2 comments:
Jeremy, you are, as always, too kind.
Very interested to see what comes up - as there has been some debate about this already...
The next country you should add... is Malta, Europe. We, as an Island Republic bang in the Middle of the Mediterranean Sea, would do nothing to explain and expound international laws - but we would provie an interesting case study. Our laws are a law unto themselves. I rest my case. Tanja Cilia
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