Intellectual Property Futures: Exploring the Global Landscape of IP Law and Policy
| dc.contributor.author | Reynolds, Graham J. | |
| dc.contributor.author | Mogyoros, Alexandra | |
| dc.contributor.author | Dagne, Teshager W. | |
| dc.date.accessioned | 2025-11-17T17:16:30Z | |
| dc.date.available | 2025-11-17T17:16:30Z | |
| dc.date.issued | 2025-11-11 | |
| dc.description.abstract | The past few decades have been witness to a number of important developments with respect to the global intellectual property (IP) system, including shifts in focus between multilateralism and bilateralism/regionalism; growing recognition of the various ways in which IP intersects with and impacts areas including human rights, development, trade, and social justice; broad acknowledgement of the economic value of many IP rights; and important theoretical interventions that have challenged the values underlying the global IP system. These developments have occurred alongside several other events, changes, and crises that have altered the landscape of our global communities. Chief among them are climate change; armed conflicts; the COVID-19 pandemic; economic changes to work; technological shifts including those relating to the internet and artificial intelligence, and their role in society; and growing recognition of the inequities that exist within and between societies as well as the ways in which these inequities are reinforced and maintained through systemic discrimination and ongoing colonialism. Given these developments, changes, and crises, what is the future of IP law and policy? Featuring contributions from scholars from across Canada and around the world, this collection offers insights into eighteen possible futures for the global IP system. Collectively, these chapters re-envision international agreements; rethink Canadian IP law; argue for the creation of space for Indigenous legal traditions; highlight the promises and perils of technology as it relates to IP; expose inequities and injustices, and provide possible pathways to correct them. | |
| dc.description.tableofcontents | List of Figures Foreword Acknowledgements Introduction Graham J. Reynolds, Alexandra Mogyoros, and Teshager W. Dagne Part I: International Treaties CHAPTER 1 Towards an International Treaty on Copyright Limitations and Exceptions for Education and Research Faith O. Majekolagbe CHAPTER 2 Breeders’ and Farmers’ Rights: Navigating the Tension Between UPOV and UNDROP Mauro Barelli, Enrico Bonadio, and Cheryl Dine CHAPTER 3 TRIPS and Its Futures Peter K. Yu Part II: Canadian Intellectual Property Law CHAPTER 4 Putting Copyright in Its Place: How Copyright History Can Help Chart the Future of the Global IP System Myra Tawfik and Sara Bannerman CHAPTER 5 Protection of AI-Generated Images in Canadian Copyright Law: Charting a Narrow Path to Originality Cody Rei-Anderson CHAPTER 6 Artificial Intelligence Generated Inventions and the Quest for a Normative Framework Bassem Awad CHAPTER 7 Tribulations of Open-Ended Concepts in Copyright Law Mistrale Goudreau CHAPTER 8 The Uncertain Future of Patented Medicine Price Regulation Gregory R. Hagen Part III: Traditional Cultural Expression and Indigenous Legal Traditions CHAPTER 9 Bottom-up Law-Making: A Critical Legal Pluralist’s View of a Soft Legal Instrument for the Governance of Traditional Cultural Expressions Anmol Patel CHAPTER 10 The Performance of Law Richard Overstall CHAPTER 11 Thinking Differently: Creating Spaces of Autonomy for the Revitalization of Indigenous Legal Traditions in the Context of Copyright Johnny Mack and Graham J. Reynolds Part IV: Technology and Intellectual Property CHAPTER 12 International Source Code Secrecy and the Characterization of Intellectual Property as National Security Anthony D. Rosborough CHAPTER 13 Location, Location, Location: The Future of Intellectual Property in Light of Private International Law Naama Daniel CHAPTER 14 Artificial Intelligence and Challenges for the Patent System: An Economic Perspective CHAPTER 15 Owning Me, Owning You—How Private Companies Acquire Rights in Our Most Intimate Data Andelka M. Phillips Part V: Intellectual Property, Inequality, and Human Rights CHAPTER 16 The Future of Geographical Indication Protection in Developing Countries—Is It the Answer to Rural Development, Food Security, and More? David J. Watson CHAPTER 17 Public Interest, Human Rights, and Copyright: The Road Less Travelled? Lisa Macklem CHAPTER 18 Unseen Hands, Invisible Rights: Unmasking Digital Workers in the Shadows of AI Innovation and Implications for the Future of Copyright Law Teshager W. Dagne Author Biographies | |
| dc.identifier.isbn | 9780776645483 | |
| dc.identifier.uri | https://press.uottawa.ca/en/9780776645360/intellectual-property-futures/ | |
| dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/10393/51044 | |
| dc.language.iso | en | |
| dc.relation.ispartofseries | Law, Technology, and Media | |
| dc.rights | Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International | en |
| dc.rights.uri | http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ | |
| dc.subject | intellectual property | |
| dc.subject | patent | |
| dc.subject | trademark | |
| dc.subject | human rights | |
| dc.subject | international | |
| dc.subject | Canada | |
| dc.subject | data | |
| dc.subject | promises and perils of technology | |
| dc.subject | artificial intelligence | |
| dc.subject | Indigenous rights | |
| dc.subject | trade | |
| dc.subject | social justice | |
| dc.subject | Copyright | |
| dc.subject | IP law | |
| dc.subject | Indigenous legal traditions | |
| dc.subject | international agreements | |
| dc.title | Intellectual Property Futures: Exploring the Global Landscape of IP Law and Policy | |
| dc.type | Book |
