Description

Book Synopsis
The world of intellectual property (patents, trade marks, copyrights, et cetera) is becoming increasingly international. More and more frequently, disputes about intellectual property have an international character. This inevitably raises questions of private international law: which national court is competent to adjudicate an international dispute of this kind? And which national law should be applied to an international case of this kind? Since the 1990s, the first question in particular has attracted attention; in recent years, the focus has shifted to the second question: which national law is applicable? Opinions differ widely on this matter today. The controversy focuses on the question whether the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention, the two most important treaties on intellectual property, contain a rule that designates the applicable law. In other words: do these treaties contain a 'conflict-of-law rule' as it is called? This question, which concerns nearly all countries in the world, is nowadays considered to be ‘heftig umstritten’ (fiercely contested) and ‘très difficile’ (very difficult). And that is where we come across something strange: today it may be fiercely contested whether these treaties contain a conflict-of-law rule, but in the past, for the nineteenth-century authors of these treaties, it was perfectly self-evident that these treaties contain a conflict-of-law rule, namely in the ‘principle of national treatment’ as it is called. How is that possible? These are the fundamental questions at the heart of this book: does the principle of national treatment in the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention contain a conflict-of-law rule? And if so, why do we no longer understand this conflict-of-law rule today?



This book is an English translation of Sierd J. Schaafsma’s groundbreaking book, which appeared in Dutch in 2009 (now updated with the most significant case law and legislation).



Key features include:



  • provides deep insight into the current state of affairs in international intellectual property law


  • extensive and groundbreaking analysis of the principle of national treatment in the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention


  • detailed and authoritative explanation of the intersection of the conflicts of law and intellectual property law.


Table of Contents
Contents: Foreword Introduction to Intellectual Property in the Conflict of Laws PART I GENESIS OF THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONAL TREATMENT 1. The birth of the principle of national treatment in copyright law 2. The Berne principle of national treatment: the genesis of the current Article 5(1) 3. The perfection of the Berne principle of national treatment: the genesis of the current Article 5(2) and (3) 4. The genesis of the principle of national treatment in the Paris Convention PART II THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONAL TREATMENT TODAY 5. The conflict-of-law rule in the principle of national treatment 6. The aliens-law rule in the principle of national treatment 7. The scope of the principle of national treatment 8. Reformulation and reform Bibliography Index

Intellectual Property in the Conflict of Laws:

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    A Hardback by Sierd J. Schaafsma

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      View other formats and editions of Intellectual Property in the Conflict of Laws: by Sierd J. Schaafsma

      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 14/01/2022
      ISBN13: 9781839108495, 978-1839108495
      ISBN10: 1839108495

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The world of intellectual property (patents, trade marks, copyrights, et cetera) is becoming increasingly international. More and more frequently, disputes about intellectual property have an international character. This inevitably raises questions of private international law: which national court is competent to adjudicate an international dispute of this kind? And which national law should be applied to an international case of this kind? Since the 1990s, the first question in particular has attracted attention; in recent years, the focus has shifted to the second question: which national law is applicable? Opinions differ widely on this matter today. The controversy focuses on the question whether the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention, the two most important treaties on intellectual property, contain a rule that designates the applicable law. In other words: do these treaties contain a 'conflict-of-law rule' as it is called? This question, which concerns nearly all countries in the world, is nowadays considered to be ‘heftig umstritten’ (fiercely contested) and ‘très difficile’ (very difficult). And that is where we come across something strange: today it may be fiercely contested whether these treaties contain a conflict-of-law rule, but in the past, for the nineteenth-century authors of these treaties, it was perfectly self-evident that these treaties contain a conflict-of-law rule, namely in the ‘principle of national treatment’ as it is called. How is that possible? These are the fundamental questions at the heart of this book: does the principle of national treatment in the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention contain a conflict-of-law rule? And if so, why do we no longer understand this conflict-of-law rule today?



      This book is an English translation of Sierd J. Schaafsma’s groundbreaking book, which appeared in Dutch in 2009 (now updated with the most significant case law and legislation).



      Key features include:



      • provides deep insight into the current state of affairs in international intellectual property law


      • extensive and groundbreaking analysis of the principle of national treatment in the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention


      • detailed and authoritative explanation of the intersection of the conflicts of law and intellectual property law.


      Table of Contents
      Contents: Foreword Introduction to Intellectual Property in the Conflict of Laws PART I GENESIS OF THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONAL TREATMENT 1. The birth of the principle of national treatment in copyright law 2. The Berne principle of national treatment: the genesis of the current Article 5(1) 3. The perfection of the Berne principle of national treatment: the genesis of the current Article 5(2) and (3) 4. The genesis of the principle of national treatment in the Paris Convention PART II THE PRINCIPLE OF NATIONAL TREATMENT TODAY 5. The conflict-of-law rule in the principle of national treatment 6. The aliens-law rule in the principle of national treatment 7. The scope of the principle of national treatment 8. Reformulation and reform Bibliography Index

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