Intellectual Property Law and Innovation /
William Van Caenegem
- UK Cambridge University Press 2019
- xviii,222p,:
This book covers the areas of intellectual property law that are most relevant to both product and technological innovation. It surveys intellectual property law relevant to protecting or monopolising the novel visual appearance, as well as the novel functions and substantive characteristics of products. Intellectual Property Law and Innovation deals with copyright laws as relevant to computers, the visual design of products, registered design laws, patent laws and the law relating to computer chip layout. It also examines aspects of passing off and trademark laws relevant to product appearance. The role of these different areas of law is examined from the perspective of innovation theory, as well as from the perspective of innovation strategy and public policy. This book takes a comparative approach, but focuses principally on the law in English speaking jurisdictions, especially Australia.
The book deals with all IPRs relevant to innovation together, rather than following traditional categories of the law: any person concerned with any aspect of innovation, whether in appearance or in substance, will be able to refer to this book. The book deals with the aspects of IPR that are relevant to production and distribution of industrial goods in the wide sense The book puts intellectual property law in the broader framework of innovation theory and strategy