Intellectual Property Overlaps: A European Perspective
By (Author) Estelle Derclaye
By (author) Matthias Leistner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
11th May 2011
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
346.24048
Hardback
406
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 29mm
895g
Intellectual property rights, conventionally seen as quite distinct, are increasingly overlapping with one another. There are several reasons for this: the expansion of IPRs beyond their traditional borders, the creation of new IPRs especially at EU level, the exploitation of gaps in the law by shrewd lawyers, and the use of unfair competition as an alternative when IPRs are either not available at all or expired. The convergence of several IPRs on the same subject-matter poses problems. As they are normally envisaged as water-tight categories, there are very few rules which cater for the sort of regime clash that any overlap of IPRs necessarily entails. This book's aim is to find appropriate rules to regulate overlaps and thereby avoid regime conflicts and undue unstructured expansion of IPRs. The book studies the practical consequences of each overlap at the international, European and national levels (where the laws of France, the UK and Germany are reviewed). It then analyses the reasons for the prohibition or authorisation of overlaps. This analysis enables the determination of criteria and principles that can be used to (re)map the overlaps to achieve appropriateness and legitimacy.
Estelle Derclaye is Associate Professor and Reader in Intellectual Property Law at the University of Nottingham. Matthias Leistner holds the Chair for Civil Law, Intellectual Property and Competition Law and is Director of the Institute for Commercial and Economic Law at the University of Bonn.