Intellectual property and biodiversity : rights to animal genetic resources

Author(s)

    • Temmerman, Michelangelo

Bibliographic Information

Intellectual property and biodiversity : rights to animal genetic resources

Michelangelo Temmerman

Kluwer Law International, c2012

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [255]-276) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The decoupling of rights over animal genetic resources as an abstract concept, from those over the concrete animals is a fact today. The application of patents in this context became a full-fledged part of the management of animal genetic resources. This monograph analyzes against this background the impact of the patent system on ownership traditions in agriculture, on animal welfare, and on biodiversity. It looks at how those factors in turn are likely to affect the shape of patent law, and how they should affect it. The author hereby focuses on important specific issues arising, including the following: the underlying elements deciding on the shape of regulation - innovation, economic de-velopment, agriculture, human rights, animal welfare, the conservation of resources, and equal trading conditions; the continuing applicability of trademarks, geographical indications, copyright, and trade secrets;; patentability rules and exclusions;; the extension of patent rights over progeny;; the meaning of 'essentially biotechnological processes';; the legal definitions of 'morality' and 'ordre public' in the context of animal welfare; and; the future of international patent law in the context of global governance theories With detailed investigation of how three major jurisdictions - the European Union, the United States, and Canada - have regulated the matter, the book highlights unresolved issues in the laws dealing with animal genetic resources. How do the usual principles of patent law affect ownership over animals in agriculture? To what extent is patent law in accordance with neighbouring fields of regulation, with relation to animal welfare? How can intellectual property be used to alter, stimulate, or tackle developments in the realm of the conservation and promotion of biodiversity? Questions like these are asked, checked upon the more technical country studies; and then used to put to test the adequacy of international patent regulation in a final chapter. As a deeply informed overview of the arguments and discussion points, this is the only book of its kind. It links general discussions to the often technical and complicated patent regulations, in the specific context of animal genetic resources. It is sure to bring lawyers in the field closer to the policy debates; and decision makers closer to the precise idiosyncrasies of patent law.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments. List of Abbreviations. Introduction. Chapter 1 Rights to AnGR. Chapter 2 Patenting AnGR: A Comparison between the United States, Europe and Canada. Chapter 3 Patenting AnGR: Impact on Ownership Traditions in Agriculture. Chapter 4 Patenting AnGR: Issues of Animal Welfare. Chapter 5 AnGR, Intellectual Property and Biodiversity: The Positive Angle. Chapter 6 Patenting AnGR Animal Genetic Resources and International Regulation. Concluding Remarks. Glossary. Bibliography. Table of Cases. Table of Legislation. Index.

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