Across Intellectual Property
Essays in Honour of Sam Ricketson

Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law Series

Coordinators: Austin Graeme W., Christie Andrew F., Kenyon Andrew T., Richardson Megan

A timely examination of fundamental issues in intellectual property (IP) law, with international perspectives looking across regimes, jurisdictions, disciplines and professions.

Language: English
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Interconnected Intellectual Property
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342 p. · 15.5x23.5 cm · Hardback
Using as a starting point the work of internationally-renowned Australian scholar Sam Ricketson, whose contributions to intellectual property (IP) law and practice have been extensive and richly diverse, this volume examines topical and fundamental issues from across IP law. With authors from the US, UK, Europe, Asia, Australia and New Zealand, the book is structured in four parts, which move across IP regimes, jurisdictions, disciplines and professions, addressing issues that include what exactly is protected by IP regimes; regime differences, overlaps and transplants; copyright authorship and artificial intelligence; internationalization of IP through public and private international law; IP intersections with historical and empirical research, human rights, privacy, personality and cultural identity; IP scholars and universities, and the influence of treatises and textbooks. This work should be read by anyone interested in understanding the central issues in the evolving field of IP law.
Part I. Across Regimes: 1. A matter of sense: what intellectual property rights protect Andrew F. Christie; 2. Overlap and redundancy in the intellectual property system: trade mark always loses Graeme B. Dinwoodie; 3. Rethinking the relationship between registered and unregistered trade marks Robert Burrell; 4. Publication in the history of patents and copyright: harmony or happenstance? David J. Brennan; 5. Of moral rights and legal transplants: connecting laws, connecting cultures Elizabeth Adeney; Part II. Across Jurisdictions: 6. People not machines: authorship and what it means in international copyright law Jane C. Ginsburg; 7. Australian legislation abroad: Singaporean pragmatism, and the role of Australian scholarship in Singaporean copyright law Ng-Loy Wee Loon; 8. 'The Berne Convention is our ideal': Hall Caine, Canadian copyright and the natural rights of authors after 1886 Kathy Bowrey; 9. A future of international copyright? Berne and the front door out Rebecca Giblin; 10. Trade-related' after all? Reframing the Paris and Berne Conventions as multilateral trade law Antony Taubman; 11. Intellectual property, innovation and new space technology Melissa de Zwart; 12. Intellectual property and private international law: strangers in the night? Richard Garnett; Part III. Across Disciplines: 13. The challenges of intellectual property legal history research Isabella Alexander; 14. Connecting intellectual property and human rights in the law school syllabus Graeme W. Austin; 15. Copyright and privacy: pre-trial discovery of user identities David Lindsay; 16. Resisting labels: trade marks and personal identity Megan Richardson; 17. Trade marks and cultural identity Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss and Susy Frankel; 18. Intellectual property law and empirical research Emily Hudson and Andrew T. Kenyon; Part IV. Across Professions: 19. Intellectual property scholars and university intellectual property policies Ann Monotti; 20. 'Measuring' an academic contribution Mark Davison; 21. Language and law: the role of the intellectual property treatise David Llewelyn; 22. Intellectual property in the courtroom: the role of the expert Peter Heerey; 23. Copyright and the 'profession' of authorship Colin Golvan; Laudatio; 24. Sam Ricketson: teacher, scholar, advocate and law Jill McKeough.
Graeme W. Austin is Professor of Law at Melbourne Law School and Chair of Private Law at Victoria University of Wellington. His books include Human Rights and Intellectual Property: Mapping the Global Interface (Cambridge, 2011) and International Intellectual Property and the ASEAN Way: Pathways to Interoperability (Cambridge, 2017).
Andrew F. Christie is Professor and Chair of Intellectual Property at Melbourne Law School. He has held distinguished visitor positions at the University of Cambridge, Duke University, North Carolina and the University of Toronto, and was identified by Managing IP as one of the 'world's fifty most influential people in intellectual property'.
Andrew T. Kenyon is Professor in the Melbourne Law School and has previously held visiting research positions at the University of British Columbia, London School of Economics and Political Science, Queen Mary University of London, and University Paris 1 Panthéon Sorbonne. He researches across media law and is the author of Comparative Defamation and Privacy Law (2016).
Megan Richardson is Professor of Law, Co-Director CMCL and Director IPRIA, Melbourne Law School, researching in intellectual property and personality rights. Her recent books include Fashioning Intellectual Property: Exhibition, Advertising and the Press: 1789–1918 (with Julian Thomas, Cambridge, 2012) and The Right to Privacy: Origins and Influence of a Nineteenth-Century Idea (Cambridge, 2017).