INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND PRIVATE INTERNATIONAL LAW.
Intellectual property has
traditionally been regulated on a territorial basis. However, the protection and
commercial exploitation of intellectual property rights such as patents, trade
marks, designs and copyright occurring across borders are now seldom confined to
one jurisdiction. This book considers how the introduction of a foreign element
inevitably raises potential problems of private international law, ranging from
establishing which court has jurisdiction and which is the applicable law to
securing the recognition and enforcement of foreign judgments.
The Internet has brought a significant increase in the scale
of this phenomenon and valuable new chapters have been added to this edition to
reflect this. Nationally protected trade marks are now used globally on websites
and copyright material is distributed, communicated and copied in a world
without borders. Patents have already been licensed on a transnational basis for
several decades. All this raises questions of jurisdiction and applicable law.
The well-respected and expert author team address such questions as; which court
will have jurisdiction to deal with the issues arising from intellectual
property rights and their exploitation in an international context? And which
national law will the court with jurisdiction apply? Private international law
questions increasingly arise and the two disciplines that previously operated in
different spheres are increasingly obliged to co-operate.
Although such issues are becoming increasingly important, a
dearth of literature exists on the subject. Fawcett and Torremans remedy that
neglect and provide a systematic and comprehensive analysis of the topic that
will be welcomed by practitioners and scholars alike.