International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability

Author:   Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng (National University of Singapore) ,  Graeme W. Austin (University of Melbourne)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
ISBN:  

9781107167209


Pages:   348
Publication Date:   05 October 2017
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability


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Author:   Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng (National University of Singapore) ,  Graeme W. Austin (University of Melbourne)
Publisher:   Cambridge University Press
Imprint:   Cambridge University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.80cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.50cm
Weight:   0.600kg
ISBN:  

9781107167209


ISBN 10:   1107167205
Pages:   348
Publication Date:   05 October 2017
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Part I. IP Interoperability and the ASEAN Way: Introduction Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng and Graeme W. Austin; 1. Intellectual property interoperability in ASEAN and beyond: an integration model Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng; 2. WIPO experience in integrating IP systems in light of plurilateral and regional agreements Denis Croze; 3. ASEAN Model for IP Protection of Cultural Heritage: lesson learned from the Indonesian experience Agus Sardjono; 4. Trademark protection in Myanmar: current issues and future directions Khin Mar Yee; 5. Trademark system in ASEAN and beyond: Cambodia's experience and future direction Sokheng Sim, Sovath Phin and Zanetti Giulio; Part II. IP Interoperability and Judicial Processes: Introduction Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng and Graeme W. Austin; 6. Singapore's intellectual property dispute resolution experience and ASEAN interoperability Mark Lim, See Tho Sok Yee and Diyanah Binte Baharudin; 7. Challenges in IP enforcement in the ASEAN economic integration Ricardo Blancaflor; 8. Co-operation and conflicts: the promises of private international law Graeme W. Austin; 9. IP remedies across borders Richard Garnett; Part III. IP Interoperability at the Administrative/Legislative Level: Introduction Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng and Graeme W. Austin; 10. ASEAN copyright model: experiences and proposals from Thailand Pisawat Sukonthapan; 11. Regional notification and registration system of Geographical Indication: ASEAN's perspective Lê Thi Thu Ha and Delphine Marie-Vivien; 12. Challenges for protection and administration of intellectual property: Thailand's perspective Jakkrit Kuanpoth; 13. Connectivity, interoperability and regional integration of the ASEAN trademarks and designs systems Ignacio De Medrano Caballero; 14. Proposal for a PAN-ASEAN trademark registration: a case for the practical application of the inter-operability principle Soh Kar Liang and Chew Phye Keat; Part IV. Beyond Interoperability: Introduction Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng and Graeme W. Austin; 15. OHIM trademark convergence program: an ASEAN context Annette Kur; 16. Developing a common patent system: lessons from the EU experience Reto Hilty and Roberto Romandini; 17. Integration in intellectual property in Latin America Carlos Adrián Garaventa and Pablo Wegbrait; Part V. Special Section – ASEAN Intellectual Property Matrix: Introduction Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng and Graeme W. Austin; 18. ASEAN IP matrix ASEAN Intellectual Property Association.

Reviews

'[International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability] is a very innovative collection of scholarly works on a rather archaic area of ASEAN economic integration efforts. The authors take into consideration the diversity of intellectual property regime and proposed a series of pathways forward within that woefully uneven IP terrain. The end result is a very convincing concept of 'IP interoperability' as a first step on the long journey towards a more robust and unified set of standards for intellectual property protection in an emerging AEC. ... a major contribution within the myriad limitations and variation of legal regimes in ASEAN.' Surin Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2008-12) 'We live in a moment of upheaval and uncertainty, with increasing awareness of the costs associated with a one-size-fits-all approach to intellectual property rights. As the pendulum swings away from a commitment to worldwide harmonization, an intriguing alternative has emerged: the ASEAN model of 'interoperability'. The ASEAN Way, introduced in this excellent collection of essays, defines a common set of IP-related values while respecting and accommodating countries' cultural and economic differences. This volume should be required reading for anyone involved in charting the future course of global IP policy.' Stacey Dogan, Boston University School of Law 'This examination of a range of intellectual property issues occurring in ASEAN countries offers a detailed analysis of national laws in an increasingly important region of the world. But it also explores how the concept of interoperability functions in each of legislative, judicial and administrative settings, presenting a mechanism for reconciling respect for national diversity with demands for greater commonality. The editors present an optimistic vision for what can be achieved in tackling this most central dilemma of international intellectual property law, which is a helpful intellectual provocation as more longstanding mechanisms of international law struggle to make progress on that dilemma.' Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford


'... a very innovative collection of scholarly works on a rather archaic area of ASEAN economic integration efforts. The authors take into consideration the diversity of intellectual property regime and propose a series of pathways forward within that woefully uneven IP terrain. The end result is a very convincing concept of 'IP interoperability' as a first step on the long journey towards a more robust and unified set of standards for intellectual property protection in an emerging AEC. ... a major contribution within the myriad limitations and variation of legal regimes in ASEAN.' Surin Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2008-12) 'We live in a moment of upheaval and uncertainty, with increasing awareness of the costs associated with a one-size-fits-all approach to intellectual property rights. As the pendulum swings away from a commitment to worldwide harmonization, an intriguing alternative has emerged: the ASEAN model of 'interoperability'. The ASEAN Way, introduced in this excellent collection of essays, defines a common set of IP-related values while respecting and accommodating countries' cultural and economic differences. This volume should be required reading for anyone involved in charting the future course of global IP policy.' Stacey Dogan, Boston University School of Law 'This examination of a range of intellectual property issues occurring in ASEAN countries offers a detailed analysis of national laws in an increasingly important region of the world. But it also explores how the concept of interoperability functions in each of legislative, judicial and administrative settings, presenting a mechanism for reconciling respect for national diversity with demands for greater commonality. The editors present an optimistic vision for what can be achieved in tackling this most central dilemma of international intellectual property law, which is a helpful intellectual provocation as more longstanding mechanisms of international law struggle to make progress on that dilemma.' Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford Advance praise: `[International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability] is a very innovative collection of scholarly works on a rather archaic area of ASEAN economic integration efforts. The authors take into consideration the diversity of intellectual property regime and proposed a series of pathways forward within that woefully uneven IP terrain. The end result is a very convincing concept of 'IP interoperability' as a first step on the long journey towards a more robust and unified set of standards for intellectual property protection in an emerging AEC. ... a major contribution within the myriad limitations and variation of legal regimes in ASEAN.' Surin Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2008-12) Advance praise: `We live in a moment of upheaval and uncertainty, with increasing awareness of the costs associated with a one-size-fits-all approach to intellectual property rights. As the pendulum swings away from a commitment to worldwide harmonization, an intriguing alternative has emerged: the ASEAN model of `interoperability'. The ASEAN Way, introduced in this excellent collection of essays, defines a common set of IP-related values while respecting and accommodating countries' cultural and economic differences. This volume should be required reading for anyone involved in charting the future course of global IP policy.' Stacey Dogan, Boston University School of Law Advance praise: `This examination of a range of intellectual property issues occurring in ASEAN countries offers a detailed analysis of national laws in an increasingly important region of the world. But it also explores how the concept of interoperability functions in each of legislative, judicial and administrative settings, presenting a mechanism for reconciling respect for national diversity with demands for greater commonality. The editors present an optimistic vision for what can be achieved in tackling this most central dilemma of international intellectual property law, which is a helpful intellectual provocation as more longstanding mechanisms of international law struggle to make progress on that dilemma.' Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford


Advance praise: '[International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability] is a very innovative collection of scholarly works on a rather archaic area of ASEAN economic integration efforts. The authors take into consideration the diversity of intellectual property regime and proposed a series of pathways forward within that woefully uneven IP terrain. The end result is a very convincing concept of 'IP interoperability' as a first step on the long journey towards a more robust and unified set of standards for intellectual property protection in an emerging AEC. ... a major contribution within the myriad limitations and variation of legal regimes in ASEAN.' Surin Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2008-2012 Advance praise: 'We live in a moment of upheaval and uncertainty, with increasing awareness of the costs associated with a one-size-fits-all approach to intellectual property rights. As the pendulum swings away from a commitment to worldwide harmonization, an intriguing alternative has emerged: the ASEAN model of 'interoperability'. The ASEAN Way, introduced in this excellent collection of essays, defines a common set of IP-related values while respecting and accommodating countries' cultural and economic differences. This volume should be required reading for anyone involved in charting the future course of global IP policy.' Stacey Dogan, Boston University School of Law Advance praise: 'This examination of a range of intellectual property issues occurring in ASEAN countries offers a detailed analysis of national laws in an increasingly important region of the world. But it also explores how the concept of interoperability functions in each of legislative, judicial and administrative settings, presenting a mechanism for reconciling respect for national diversity with demands for greater commonality. The editors present an optimistic vision for what can be achieved in tackling this most central dilemma of international intellectual property law, which is a helpful intellectual provocation as more longstanding mechanisms of international law struggle to make progress on that dilemma.' Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford


'... a very innovative collection of scholarly works on a rather archaic area of ASEAN economic integration efforts. The authors take into consideration the diversity of intellectual property regime and propose a series of pathways forward within that woefully uneven IP terrain. The end result is a very convincing concept of 'IP interoperability' as a first step on the long journey towards a more robust and unified set of standards for intellectual property protection in an emerging AEC. ... a major contribution within the myriad limitations and variation of legal regimes in ASEAN.' Surin Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2008-12) 'We live in a moment of upheaval and uncertainty, with increasing awareness of the costs associated with a one-size-fits-all approach to intellectual property rights. As the pendulum swings away from a commitment to worldwide harmonization, an intriguing alternative has emerged: the ASEAN model of 'interoperability'. The ASEAN Way, introduced in this excellent collection of essays, defines a common set of IP-related values while respecting and accommodating countries' cultural and economic differences. This volume should be required reading for anyone involved in charting the future course of global IP policy.' Stacey Dogan, Boston University School of Law 'This examination of a range of intellectual property issues occurring in ASEAN countries offers a detailed analysis of national laws in an increasingly important region of the world. But it also explores how the concept of interoperability functions in each of legislative, judicial and administrative settings, presenting a mechanism for reconciling respect for national diversity with demands for greater commonality. The editors present an optimistic vision for what can be achieved in tackling this most central dilemma of international intellectual property law, which is a helpful intellectual provocation as more longstanding mechanisms of international law struggle to make progress on that dilemma.' Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford


Advance praise: '[International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability] is a very innovative collection of scholarly works on a rather archaic area of ASEAN economic integration efforts. The authors take into consideration the diversity of intellectual property regime and proposed a series of pathways forward within that woefully uneven IP terrain. The end result is a very convincing concept of 'IP interoperability' as a first step on the long journey towards a more robust and unified set of standards for intellectual property protection in an emerging AEC. ... a major contribution within the myriad limitations and variation of legal regimes in ASEAN.' Surin Pitsuwan, former Secretary-General of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) (2008-12) Advance praise: 'We live in a moment of upheaval and uncertainty, with increasing awareness of the costs associated with a one-size-fits-all approach to intellectual property rights. As the pendulum swings away from a commitment to worldwide harmonization, an intriguing alternative has emerged: the ASEAN model of 'interoperability'. The ASEAN Way, introduced in this excellent collection of essays, defines a common set of IP-related values while respecting and accommodating countries' cultural and economic differences. This volume should be required reading for anyone involved in charting the future course of global IP policy.' Stacey Dogan, Boston University School of Law Advance praise: 'This examination of a range of intellectual property issues occurring in ASEAN countries offers a detailed analysis of national laws in an increasingly important region of the world. But it also explores how the concept of interoperability functions in each of legislative, judicial and administrative settings, presenting a mechanism for reconciling respect for national diversity with demands for greater commonality. The editors present an optimistic vision for what can be achieved in tackling this most central dilemma of international intellectual property law, which is a helpful intellectual provocation as more longstanding mechanisms of international law struggle to make progress on that dilemma.' Graeme B. Dinwoodie, University of Oxford


Author Information

Elizabeth Siew-Kuan Ng is Deputy Chairwoman and Director of the Intellectual Property Unit at the Centre for Law and Business, and Associate Professor of Law at the National University of Singapore's Law School. She was appointed amicus curiae by the Singapore Court of Appeal on IP matters and is an IP Adjudicator of the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore. She is a Barrister-at-law of Middle Temple (England) and Advocate and Solicitor (Supreme Court, Singapore). A Fellow of Cambridge Commonwealth Society, she was a consultant of the World Intellectual Property Organization (Switzerland). Graeme W. Austin is Professor of Law at Melbourne University with a joint appointment as Chair of Private Law at Victoria University of Wellington. He is co-author of the pathbreaking text, Human Rights and Intellectual Property: Mapping the Global Interface (Cambridge, 2011). Before returning to Australasia in 2011, he was the J. Byron McCormick Professor of Law at the University of Arizona, where he convened the intellectual property programme. He is a former Member of the New Zealand Copyright Tribunal.

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