Intellectual Property and Free Trade Agreements in the Asia-Pacific Region
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- Author: CHRISTOPS ANTOND & RETO M. HILTY
- ISBN: 9783642308871
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Buy Intellectual Property and Free Trade Agreements in the Asia-Pacific Region | Law Books , FOREIGN BOOKS
This book is highly topical. The shift from the multilateral
WTO negotiations to bilateral and regional Free Trade Agreements has been going
on for some time, but it is bound to accelerate after the WTO Doha round of
negotiations is now widely regarded as a failure. However, there is a
particular regional angle to this topic as well. After concluding that further
progress in the Doha round was unlikely, Pacific Rim nations recently have
progressed with the negotiations of a greatly expanded Trans-Pacific
Partnership Agreement that includes industrialised economies and developed countries
such as the United States, Japan, Australia and New Zealand, recently emerged
economies such as Singapore, but also several developing countries in Asia and
Latin America such as Malaysia and Vietnam. US and EU led efforts to conclude
FTAs with Asia-Pacific nations are also bound to accelerate again, after a
temporary slowdown in the negotiations following the change of government in
the United States and the expiry of the US President’s fast-track negotiation
authority. The book will provide an assessment of these dynamics in the world’s
fastest growing region. It will look at the IP chapters from a legal
perspective, but also put the developments into a socio-economic and political
context. Many agreements in fact are concluded because of this context rather
than for purely economic reasons or to achieve progress in fields like IP law.
The structure of the book follows an outline that groups countries into
interest alliances according to their respective IP priorities. This ranges
from the driving forces of the EU, US and Japan, via Asia-Pacific resource-rich
but IP poor economies such as Australia and New Zealand, recently emerged
economies with strong IP systems such as Singapore and Korea to leading
developing countries such as China and India and ‘second tier industrializing
economies’ such as Thailand, Malaysia and Indonesia.