Cover image for International Patent-Legislation and Developing Countries
International Patent-Legislation and Developing Countries
Title:
International Patent-Legislation and Developing Countries
ISBN:
9789401192187
Personal Author:
Edition:
1st ed. 1971.
Publication Information New:
Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands : Imprint: Springer, 1971.
Physical Description:
288 p. online resource.
Contents:
I. The Evolution of Patent Legislation and Practices under Patent Rights, Nationally an Internationally -- I. Society and the Inventor -- II. The Role of Patents Today -- III. The Development of an International Patent System -- II. The Effects of the International Patent System on Developing Countries and Possible Changes of the System ror their Benefit -- I. The Status of Developing Countries in Patent Matters -- II. The Direct Effects of the International Patent System on Developing Countries -- III. Indirect Effects of the International Patent System -- IV. The Positions of various International Organizations -- V. The scope for Remedies within the existing System -- VI. Possible Remedies Outside the Present System -- Conclusions -- Abbreviations used in the Bibliography.
Abstract:
THE INTERNATIONAL PATENT-LEGISLATION AND DEVELOPING COUNTRIES A major concern today in many fields of international cooperation is the development of the nonindustrialized part of the world. This was not always so. Until fairly recently contacts among States were basi­ cally limited to diplomatic intercourse. The concept of State sovereign­ ty naturally led to the application of the principle of legal reciprocity between States. In the few areas outside diplomatic relations where international cooperation developed during the last century the same principle of legal reciprocity was applied. The cooperation that did take place was mostly among a limited number of Western States. In case countries outside this group wished to participate they were free to do so on accepting the traditional standards for such cooperation. Though a few countries, which today would have been or are known as develop­ ing countries, did join in various schemes of international cooperation, the majority of them remained outside. Moreover, a large number of States, which today are known as developing, did not exist as sovereign States at the time. One of the areas in which a system of international cooperation was set up in the latter part of the nineteenth century was that of patent protection.
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Language:
English