Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Investment Law

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (1) ◽  
pp. 338-345
Author(s):  
Luke Hawthorne
2021 ◽  
Vol 9 (17) ◽  
pp. 238-240
Author(s):  
Juan Manuel Rivero Godoy

The present book is a masterpiece on both international arbitration and intellectual property features where the authors have achieved to address the attention to substantial and procedural elements when an international conflict arises between different actors such as states, companies, individuals, etc.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. Sean Morris

One of the most important cases in the jurisprudence of international law – Chorzów Factory – has a hidden secret, so much so that, even when in plain sight, legal post-mortems of the case fail to mention this well-kept secret. Chorzów Factory was about intellectual property rights, specifically patents and trade secrets, and this narrative has never been fully addressed. When the developments in international investment law and arbitration are fully considered it is worth looking back at Chorzów Factory to associate it with new streams of contemporary investor-state disputes that include issues such as intellectual property rights. Because Chorzów Factory has established the full reparation standard for unlawful expropriation, the standard has enabled a continuity of international law and underscores its importance for contemporary investment arbitration. However, the intellectual property narrative of Chorzów Factory has been neglected, and, in this article, I want to develop the intellectual property narrative of Chorzów Factory and to demonstrate the nexus between fair compensation, intellectual property rights and the continuity of international law.


2019 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
pp. 1-53 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian Arato

AbstractThis Article argues that investment treaties subtly constrain how nations organize their internal systems of private law, including laws of property, contracts, corporations, and intellectual property. Problematically, the treaties do so on a one-size-fits-all basis, disregarding the wide variation in values reflected in these domestic legal institutions. Investor-state dispute settlement exacerbates this tension, further distorting national private law arrangements. This hidden aspect of the system produces inefficiency, unfairness, and distributional inequities that have eluded the regime's critics and apologists alike.


2021 ◽  
pp. 23-49
Author(s):  
Henning Grosse Ruse-Khan

This chapter provides a broad systemic overview of the regimes that regulate intellectual property and hedge exclusivity at the international level, focusing on the interplay of some of the core constitutional hedges in the international IP, investment law, and human rights fields. Such hedges include concepts of private rights (as well as negative rights), concepts of minimum standards, non-discrimination protections, the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) as a comprehensive supra-national code, and IP protection via broad investment concepts. The chapter then discusses some potential effects of accumulation—that is, the impact of situations in which several constitutional hedges overlap and operate together on a state's ability to regulate IP rights. For the protection conferred by international IP treaties—such as the Paris Convention and the Berne Convention, as well as TRIPS and free trade agreements (FTAs)—this follows from the minimum standards principle, where a later treaty does not override or extinguish existing protections but simply adds to them. This accumulation effect means that states have to consider all forms of protection when deciding on a measure that potentially interferes with IP rights.


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