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Geographical indications at the crossroads of trade, development, and culture : focus on Asia-Pacific / edited by Irene Calboli, Wee Loon Ng-Loy.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextPublisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2017Description: 1 online resource (xx, 550 pages) : digital, PDF file(s)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781316711002 (ebook)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: Print version: : No titleDDC classification:
  • 382/.3 23
LOC classification:
  • K1562 .G49 2017
Online resources:
Contents:
Machine generated contents note: Part I. Framing the Debate: The Still Contested Role of Geographical Indications in the Global Economy: 1. Geographical indications between trade, development, culture, and marketing: framing a fair(er) system of protection in the global economy? Irene Calboli; 2. From geography to history: geographical indications and the reputational link Dev S. Gangjee; 3. The limited promise of geographical indications for farmers in developing countries Justin Hughes; 4. Rethinking the work of geographical indications in Asia: addressing hidden geographies of gendered labour Rosemary J. Coombe and S. Ali Malik; 5. A look at the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement: a missed opportunity? Daniel Gervais; Part II. Geographical Indications at the Crossroads of International and National Trade: 6. Geographical indications and mega-regional trade agreements and negotiations Susy Frankel; 7. Geographical indications as property: European Union association agreements and investor state provisions Anselm Kamperman Sanders; 8. How would geographical indications from Asia fare in Europe? Christopher Heath; 9. Looking beyond the known story: how the prehistory of protection of geographical indications in the Americas provides an alternate approach Christine Haight Farley; 10. European Union-Singapore free trade agreement: a new chapter for geographical indications in Singapore Susanna H. S. Leong; Part III. The Promise and Problems of Geographical Indications for Local and Rural Development: 11. Sunshine in a bottle? Geographical indications, the Australian wine industry, and the promise of rural development Peter Drahos; 12. Legal protection of geographical indications as a means to foster social and economic development in Malaysia Tay Pek San; 13. The use of geographical indications in Vietnam: a promising tool for socio-economic development? Barbara Pick, Delphine Marie-Vivien and Dong Bui Kim; 14. 'Vanity GIs': India's legislation on geographical indications and the missing regulatory framework Yogesh Pai and Tania Singla; 15. Protection of geographical indications in Taiwan: turning a legal conundrum into a policy tool for development Szu-Yuan Wan; 16. A unique type of cocktail: protection of geographical indications in China Haiyan Zheng; 17. The potentials, and the current challenges, of geographical indications protection in Sri Lanka Naazima Kamardeen; Part IV. The Unsettled Relationship between Geographical Indications, Traditional Knowledge, and Cultural Heritage: 18. The Geographical Indications Act 2013: protection of traditional knowledge in Bangladesh with special reference to Jamdani Mahua Zahur; 19. From chianti to kimchi: geographical indications, intangible cultural heritage, and their unsettled relationship with cultural diversity Tomer Broud; 20. Geographical indications, heritage and decentralization policies: the case of Indonesia Christoph Antons; 21. When geographical indications meet intangible cultural heritage: the new Japanese act on geographical indications Steven Van Uystel.
Summary: Historically, few topics have proven to be so controversial in international intellectual property as the protection of geographical indications (GIs). The adoption of TRIPS in 1994 did not resolve disagreements, and countries worldwide continue to quarrel today as to the nature, the scope, and the enforcement of GI protection nationally and internationally. Thus far, however, there is little literature addressing GI protection from the point of view of the Asia-Pacific region, even though countries in this region have actively discussed the topic and in several instances have promoted GIs as a mechanism to foster local development and safeguard local culture. This book, edited by renowned intellectual property scholars, fills the void in the current literature and offers a variety of contributions focusing on the framework and effects of GI protection in the Asia-Pacific region. The book is available as Open Access.
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Machine generated contents note: Part I. Framing the Debate: The Still Contested Role of Geographical Indications in the Global Economy: 1. Geographical indications between trade, development, culture, and marketing: framing a fair(er) system of protection in the global economy? Irene Calboli; 2. From geography to history: geographical indications and the reputational link Dev S. Gangjee; 3. The limited promise of geographical indications for farmers in developing countries Justin Hughes; 4. Rethinking the work of geographical indications in Asia: addressing hidden geographies of gendered labour Rosemary J. Coombe and S. Ali Malik; 5. A look at the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement: a missed opportunity? Daniel Gervais; Part II. Geographical Indications at the Crossroads of International and National Trade: 6. Geographical indications and mega-regional trade agreements and negotiations Susy Frankel; 7. Geographical indications as property: European Union association agreements and investor state provisions Anselm Kamperman Sanders; 8. How would geographical indications from Asia fare in Europe? Christopher Heath; 9. Looking beyond the known story: how the prehistory of protection of geographical indications in the Americas provides an alternate approach Christine Haight Farley; 10. European Union-Singapore free trade agreement: a new chapter for geographical indications in Singapore Susanna H. S. Leong; Part III. The Promise and Problems of Geographical Indications for Local and Rural Development: 11. Sunshine in a bottle? Geographical indications, the Australian wine industry, and the promise of rural development Peter Drahos; 12. Legal protection of geographical indications as a means to foster social and economic development in Malaysia Tay Pek San; 13. The use of geographical indications in Vietnam: a promising tool for socio-economic development? Barbara Pick, Delphine Marie-Vivien and Dong Bui Kim; 14. 'Vanity GIs': India's legislation on geographical indications and the missing regulatory framework Yogesh Pai and Tania Singla; 15. Protection of geographical indications in Taiwan: turning a legal conundrum into a policy tool for development Szu-Yuan Wan; 16. A unique type of cocktail: protection of geographical indications in China Haiyan Zheng; 17. The potentials, and the current challenges, of geographical indications protection in Sri Lanka Naazima Kamardeen; Part IV. The Unsettled Relationship between Geographical Indications, Traditional Knowledge, and Cultural Heritage: 18. The Geographical Indications Act 2013: protection of traditional knowledge in Bangladesh with special reference to Jamdani Mahua Zahur; 19. From chianti to kimchi: geographical indications, intangible cultural heritage, and their unsettled relationship with cultural diversity Tomer Broud; 20. Geographical indications, heritage and decentralization policies: the case of Indonesia Christoph Antons; 21. When geographical indications meet intangible cultural heritage: the new Japanese act on geographical indications Steven Van Uystel.

Historically, few topics have proven to be so controversial in international intellectual property as the protection of geographical indications (GIs). The adoption of TRIPS in 1994 did not resolve disagreements, and countries worldwide continue to quarrel today as to the nature, the scope, and the enforcement of GI protection nationally and internationally. Thus far, however, there is little literature addressing GI protection from the point of view of the Asia-Pacific region, even though countries in this region have actively discussed the topic and in several instances have promoted GIs as a mechanism to foster local development and safeguard local culture. This book, edited by renowned intellectual property scholars, fills the void in the current literature and offers a variety of contributions focusing on the framework and effects of GI protection in the Asia-Pacific region. The book is available as Open Access.

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