Across Intellectual Property
Herausgeber: Austin, Graeme W; Kenyon, Andrew T; Christie, Andrew F
Across Intellectual Property
Herausgeber: Austin, Graeme W; Kenyon, Andrew T; Christie, Andrew F
- Gebundenes Buch
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Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 342
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. März 2020
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 626g
- ISBN-13: 9781108485159
- ISBN-10: 1108485154
- Artikelnr.: 57163373
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
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.
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.
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.
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.