Introduction to Global Intellectual Property Law
Dates:
- Wed 22 Jan 2020 13.00 - 17.45
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2020-01-22 13:00
2020-01-22 17:45
Europe/Paris
Introduction to Global Intellectual Property Law
Intellectual property (IP) lies at the heart of global hegemony and the interests of the national security state in the control of core technologies, as was recently illustrated by the escalation of the US-China trade war following the US' blacklisting of Chinese telecom giant Huawei. The 1995 TRIPs agreement linked IP to international trade and since then, IP has transcended not only national and sectorial borders, but also other fields of law that are traditionally considered separate from IP. These interactions of IP law with other disciplines will be the core of our course. Its aim is to (i) familiarize researchers with the increasing prominence of IP in law and politics and (ii) explore how IP is embedded in broader legal and political contexts. The course will last 10 hours and comprise 5 sessions, spread out over three days. It will take place between 22-24 January 2020 in the afternoons. A detailed description of each session, as well as the selected readings, is attached in the syllabus below.
Sala del Camino - Villa Salviati- Castle
DD/MM/YYYY
Sala del Camino - Villa Salviati- Castle
Intellectual property (IP) lies at the heart of global hegemony and the interests of the national security state in the control of core technologies, as was recently illustrated by the escalation of the US-China trade war following the US' blacklisting of Chinese telecom giant Huawei. The 1995 TRIPs agreement linked IP to international trade and since then, IP has transcended not only national and sectorial borders, but also other fields of law that are traditionally considered separate from IP. These interactions of IP law with other disciplines will be the core of our course. Its aim is to (i) familiarize researchers with the increasing prominence of IP in law and politics and (ii) explore how IP is embedded in broader legal and political contexts. The course will last 10 hours and comprise 5 sessions, spread out over three days. It will take place between 22-24 January 2020 in the afternoons. A detailed description of each session, as well as the selected readings, is attached in the syllabus below.
- Location:
- Sala del Camino - Villa Salviati- Castle
- Affiliation:
- Department of Law
- Type:
- Course
- Contact:
-
Ph.D. Researcher Svitlana Lebedenko (EUI)
-
Send a mail
-
Ph.D. Researcher Dijkman Leon (EUI)
-
Send a mail
- Speaker:
-
Ph.D. Researcher Svitlana Lebedenko (EUI)
-
Ph.D. Researcher Dijkman Leon (EUI)
- Attachment:
- Course Syllabus
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