Description

Book Synopsis
Written by expert scholars and practitioners, this unique Research Handbook presents the state of the art in research on, and the practice of, international design law. Combining cutting-edge research with a practical approach, it examines key trends and covers key cases, regional and national laws, as well as concepts of international design protection. In particular, the U.S. framework is compared with the regime of the EU, and issues relating to the Hague Agreement are also covered.



Split across five thematic parts, this Research Handbook examines the foundations of, and methodological perspectives on, design law, the establishment and enforcement of protection, as well as many other critical issues, addressed from a transnational and comparative approach. Chapters consider protection of three-dimensional trade marks, graphical user interfaces, spare parts, protection of designs on the basis of use, priority issues under the Community design scheme, and cross-border copyright protection in Europe.



Clear and accessible, the Research Handbook on Design Law will be of value to emerging and established scholars and students of international design law, while also being a key resource for practitioners and policy makers seeking to react and adapt to the rapid emergence of global developments.



Trade Review
‘Hennig Hartwig’s edited collection is a timely, highly informative and fundamental contribution to the academic debate on design rights in general, and the surrounding policies and divergent approaches taken to them in various jurisdictions, in particular. The breadth of topics and jurisdictions discussed, and the book’s depth of analysis, makes the Research Handbook on Design Law an invaluable addition to Elgar’s series and IP scholarship at large. It is an indispensable read for all those interested in gaining a wider and deeper understanding of all pertinent issues concerning design law, and it provides a springboard for further research and policy discussions in this exciting field of IP law.’ -- Marc D. Mimler, Queen Mary Journal of Intellectual Property
‘The slant is more to the academic than to the practitioner but it has enough for both. If you want to know “what is the state of the law on design topic X”, this is the book for you. You will probably also find, as I did, that once you delve into one chapter you will find a wealth of information around the topic as well as on the question you originally asked. And you will no doubt wonder at some point, as you look at one of the many illustrations of some mundane design: “how on earth did that ever get registered”? The answers are all within.’ -- Douglas Campbell QC, Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice
‘This is an excellent book for those who are seriously interested in design law. The contributions have been written by leading academics and practitioners in design law and together represent a treasure trove of cases, examples, good pieces of advice and detailed and high quality analyses of different aspects of design law. It is particularly refreshing that many of the contributors manage to include comparative perspectives. This book delivers on all the parameters and more so and it does so with flying colors.’ -- Jens Schovsbo, Nordiskt Immateriellt Rättsskydd
‘The Research Handbook on Design Law addresses the need by collecting comparative studies of product designs authored by the world's leading practitioners and scholars. Topics are carefully selected by Dr. Henning Hartwig, a leading design law practitioner involved in the landmark decisions of the Court of Justice for European Union (CJEU), based on his extensive experience in litigating community and German design rights and other related rights for both German and US clients. Overall, it bridges academic theories and a practice strategy for procuring and enforcing multiple IP rights on product designs in the global market.’ -- Toshiko Takenaka, Journal of the Patent & Trademark Office Society
‘In short, this book is an exceptional foray into the multifaceted world of designs and provides an invaluable source of scholarship for both practitioners, academics and policy-makers specialising in this fast-moving area of IP. It contributes to the current state of knowledge in this field and gives much material for further reflection.’ -- Gordon Humphreys, European Intellectual Property Review
‘The book is at home on both an academic and a practitioner bookshelf and I’m sure will be an important and valuable work for many years to come.’ -- Rosie Burbridge, IPkat.com
‘This work is based on the knowledge of how important every chapter is for deepening, but also for harmonizing international design law. In this respect, this book makes an essential contribution. These in-depth analyses are not only a very welcome help for daily practice but – particularly nowadays when preparing for a reform of the design law of the European Union – also of great value for the further development of this area of intellectual property law.’ -- Guido Kucsko, Österreichische Blätter für Gewerblichen Rechtsschutz und Urheberrecht (originally published in German: translated by Henning Hartwig)
‘This collection offers a highly readable collection of scholarship which is to be commended for getting to grips with the nitty gritty of difficult points of design law, and for its rich coverage of different jurisdictional perspectives. The Handbook offers an invaluable resource to readers looking to develop comparative perspectives. It also shines a light on a number of design law issues which have perhaps not received the attention in the literature that they deserve, as well as exploring still-evolving points of practice and the potential for novel interdisciplinary inputs. The collection is also rightly imbued throughout with a sustained interest and focus on the particularities and challenges of design law as a legal field which is very much centred upon the visual, and the inherent difficulties which arise as a result in design filing and in analysing, arguing and deciding design cases. Contributions are both practically useful and intellectually stimulating, and the collection is populated throughout with helpful illustrations – a must in any text dealing with design law.’ -- Jane Cornwell, Intellectual Property Quarterly
'This book is both a practice-oriented and intellectually inspiring analysis of European, U.S. and international design law. Its chapters, written by practitioners and academics who are leading in this field, cover fundamental issues of practical importance, of doctrine and of policy.' -- Ansgar Ohly, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany
'Design law is perhaps the most conceptually challenging of all IP rights, sometimes and sometimes not co-existing with other IP rights. Trade marks, copyright and some patent law conceptions are all in the mix. This collection of chapters is remarkable. It illuminates the issues and how different laws and judicial decisions around the world have, in their various ways, struggled with the often inchoate or cloudy concepts behind legislation. And the book is also a pleasure to read. A must.' -- The Rt. Hon. Sir Robin Jacob, UCL Faculty of Laws, UK

Table of Contents
Contents: Introduction to the Research Handbook on Design Law xxiv Henning Hartwig PART I FOUNDATIONS 1. Requirements for Design Protection: Global Commonalities 2 Bernard Volken 2. Trends in Functionality Jurisprudence: U.S. and E.U. Design Law 30 Jason Du Mont/Mark D. Janis 3. Easier to See than to Say: Catching the Elusive Spirit of Design in a Net of Words 77 David Musker PART II METHODOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 4. Reciprocity in European Design Law 119 Henning Hartwig 5. Design Rights and Designer’s Rights in the EU 169 Anna Tischner 6. Enablement and Indefiniteness in U.S. Design Patents after In re Maatita and Ex parte Kaufman 207 Margaret Polson PART III: ESTABLISHING AND ENFORCING PROTECTION 7. Protection of Designs on the Basis of Use 232 Estelle Derclaye 8. Claiming Priority under the Community Design Scheme 250 Henning Hartwig 9. Enforcing Design Rights throughout Europe 283 Annette Kur PART IV: CRITICAL ISSUES 10. Protection of Spare Parts in Design Law: A Comparative Law Analysis 304 Annette Kur and Ádám György 11. Design Protection for Graphical User Interfaces 345 Tracy-Gene G. Durkin 12. ‘Mast-Jägermeister’ before the Court of Justice of the EU: What the Outcome Really Means 378 Henning Hartwig PART V TRANSNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE DIMENSIONS 13. International Design Law Policies: Present and Future 405 Robert Mirko Stutz 14. Three-Dimensional Trade Marks and Designs: Comparison and Conflict 441 Alexander von Mühlendahl 15. Cross-border Copyright Protection in Europe 482 Uma Suthersanen 16. How Different is Different? Modern Neuroscience and its Impact on Design Law 507 Charles Lee Mauro and Christopher Daniel Morley Index 550

Research Handbook on Design Law

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A Hardback by Henning Hartwig

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    View other formats and editions of Research Handbook on Design Law by Henning Hartwig

    Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
    Publication Date: 21/05/2021
    ISBN13: 9781781955871, 978-1781955871
    ISBN10: 1781955875

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    Written by expert scholars and practitioners, this unique Research Handbook presents the state of the art in research on, and the practice of, international design law. Combining cutting-edge research with a practical approach, it examines key trends and covers key cases, regional and national laws, as well as concepts of international design protection. In particular, the U.S. framework is compared with the regime of the EU, and issues relating to the Hague Agreement are also covered.



    Split across five thematic parts, this Research Handbook examines the foundations of, and methodological perspectives on, design law, the establishment and enforcement of protection, as well as many other critical issues, addressed from a transnational and comparative approach. Chapters consider protection of three-dimensional trade marks, graphical user interfaces, spare parts, protection of designs on the basis of use, priority issues under the Community design scheme, and cross-border copyright protection in Europe.



    Clear and accessible, the Research Handbook on Design Law will be of value to emerging and established scholars and students of international design law, while also being a key resource for practitioners and policy makers seeking to react and adapt to the rapid emergence of global developments.



    Trade Review
    ‘Hennig Hartwig’s edited collection is a timely, highly informative and fundamental contribution to the academic debate on design rights in general, and the surrounding policies and divergent approaches taken to them in various jurisdictions, in particular. The breadth of topics and jurisdictions discussed, and the book’s depth of analysis, makes the Research Handbook on Design Law an invaluable addition to Elgar’s series and IP scholarship at large. It is an indispensable read for all those interested in gaining a wider and deeper understanding of all pertinent issues concerning design law, and it provides a springboard for further research and policy discussions in this exciting field of IP law.’ -- Marc D. Mimler, Queen Mary Journal of Intellectual Property
    ‘The slant is more to the academic than to the practitioner but it has enough for both. If you want to know “what is the state of the law on design topic X”, this is the book for you. You will probably also find, as I did, that once you delve into one chapter you will find a wealth of information around the topic as well as on the question you originally asked. And you will no doubt wonder at some point, as you look at one of the many illustrations of some mundane design: “how on earth did that ever get registered”? The answers are all within.’ -- Douglas Campbell QC, Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice
    ‘This is an excellent book for those who are seriously interested in design law. The contributions have been written by leading academics and practitioners in design law and together represent a treasure trove of cases, examples, good pieces of advice and detailed and high quality analyses of different aspects of design law. It is particularly refreshing that many of the contributors manage to include comparative perspectives. This book delivers on all the parameters and more so and it does so with flying colors.’ -- Jens Schovsbo, Nordiskt Immateriellt Rättsskydd
    ‘The Research Handbook on Design Law addresses the need by collecting comparative studies of product designs authored by the world's leading practitioners and scholars. Topics are carefully selected by Dr. Henning Hartwig, a leading design law practitioner involved in the landmark decisions of the Court of Justice for European Union (CJEU), based on his extensive experience in litigating community and German design rights and other related rights for both German and US clients. Overall, it bridges academic theories and a practice strategy for procuring and enforcing multiple IP rights on product designs in the global market.’ -- Toshiko Takenaka, Journal of the Patent & Trademark Office Society
    ‘In short, this book is an exceptional foray into the multifaceted world of designs and provides an invaluable source of scholarship for both practitioners, academics and policy-makers specialising in this fast-moving area of IP. It contributes to the current state of knowledge in this field and gives much material for further reflection.’ -- Gordon Humphreys, European Intellectual Property Review
    ‘The book is at home on both an academic and a practitioner bookshelf and I’m sure will be an important and valuable work for many years to come.’ -- Rosie Burbridge, IPkat.com
    ‘This work is based on the knowledge of how important every chapter is for deepening, but also for harmonizing international design law. In this respect, this book makes an essential contribution. These in-depth analyses are not only a very welcome help for daily practice but – particularly nowadays when preparing for a reform of the design law of the European Union – also of great value for the further development of this area of intellectual property law.’ -- Guido Kucsko, Österreichische Blätter für Gewerblichen Rechtsschutz und Urheberrecht (originally published in German: translated by Henning Hartwig)
    ‘This collection offers a highly readable collection of scholarship which is to be commended for getting to grips with the nitty gritty of difficult points of design law, and for its rich coverage of different jurisdictional perspectives. The Handbook offers an invaluable resource to readers looking to develop comparative perspectives. It also shines a light on a number of design law issues which have perhaps not received the attention in the literature that they deserve, as well as exploring still-evolving points of practice and the potential for novel interdisciplinary inputs. The collection is also rightly imbued throughout with a sustained interest and focus on the particularities and challenges of design law as a legal field which is very much centred upon the visual, and the inherent difficulties which arise as a result in design filing and in analysing, arguing and deciding design cases. Contributions are both practically useful and intellectually stimulating, and the collection is populated throughout with helpful illustrations – a must in any text dealing with design law.’ -- Jane Cornwell, Intellectual Property Quarterly
    'This book is both a practice-oriented and intellectually inspiring analysis of European, U.S. and international design law. Its chapters, written by practitioners and academics who are leading in this field, cover fundamental issues of practical importance, of doctrine and of policy.' -- Ansgar Ohly, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Germany
    'Design law is perhaps the most conceptually challenging of all IP rights, sometimes and sometimes not co-existing with other IP rights. Trade marks, copyright and some patent law conceptions are all in the mix. This collection of chapters is remarkable. It illuminates the issues and how different laws and judicial decisions around the world have, in their various ways, struggled with the often inchoate or cloudy concepts behind legislation. And the book is also a pleasure to read. A must.' -- The Rt. Hon. Sir Robin Jacob, UCL Faculty of Laws, UK

    Table of Contents
    Contents: Introduction to the Research Handbook on Design Law xxiv Henning Hartwig PART I FOUNDATIONS 1. Requirements for Design Protection: Global Commonalities 2 Bernard Volken 2. Trends in Functionality Jurisprudence: U.S. and E.U. Design Law 30 Jason Du Mont/Mark D. Janis 3. Easier to See than to Say: Catching the Elusive Spirit of Design in a Net of Words 77 David Musker PART II METHODOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES 4. Reciprocity in European Design Law 119 Henning Hartwig 5. Design Rights and Designer’s Rights in the EU 169 Anna Tischner 6. Enablement and Indefiniteness in U.S. Design Patents after In re Maatita and Ex parte Kaufman 207 Margaret Polson PART III: ESTABLISHING AND ENFORCING PROTECTION 7. Protection of Designs on the Basis of Use 232 Estelle Derclaye 8. Claiming Priority under the Community Design Scheme 250 Henning Hartwig 9. Enforcing Design Rights throughout Europe 283 Annette Kur PART IV: CRITICAL ISSUES 10. Protection of Spare Parts in Design Law: A Comparative Law Analysis 304 Annette Kur and Ádám György 11. Design Protection for Graphical User Interfaces 345 Tracy-Gene G. Durkin 12. ‘Mast-Jägermeister’ before the Court of Justice of the EU: What the Outcome Really Means 378 Henning Hartwig PART V TRANSNATIONAL AND COMPARATIVE DIMENSIONS 13. International Design Law Policies: Present and Future 405 Robert Mirko Stutz 14. Three-Dimensional Trade Marks and Designs: Comparison and Conflict 441 Alexander von Mühlendahl 15. Cross-border Copyright Protection in Europe 482 Uma Suthersanen 16. How Different is Different? Modern Neuroscience and its Impact on Design Law 507 Charles Lee Mauro and Christopher Daniel Morley Index 550

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