
This book focusses on the debates concerning aspects of intellectual property law that bear on access to medicines in a set of developing countries. Specifically, the contributors look at measures that regulate the acquisition, recognition, and use of patent rights on pharmaceuticals and trade secrets in data concerning them, along with the conditions under which these rights expire so as to permit the production of cheaper generic drugs. In addition, the book includes commentary from scholars in human rights, international institutions, and transnational activism. The case studies presented from 11 Latin American countries, have many commonalities in terms of economics, legal systems, and political histories, and yet they differ in the balance each has struck between proprietary interests and access concerns. The book documents this cross-country variation in legal norms and practice, identifies the factors that have led to differences in result, and theorizes as to how differentials among these countries occur and why they endure within a common transnational regulatory regime. The work concludes by putting the results of the investigations into a global administrative law frame and offers suggestions on institutional mechanisms for considering the trade-offs between health and wealth.
This book investigates the tension between intellectual property protections for pharmaceuticals and the public health necessity of affordable medicine access within Latin American nations. The authors, César Rodríguez-Garavito and Rochelle C. Dreyfuss, utilize a comparative legal framework to examine how eleven distinct countries navigate the intersection of trade law, patent rights, and human rights. By analyzing the regulatory variations across these jurisdictions, the text seeks to explain why different nations arrive at disparate outcomes despite operating under similar transnational legal regimes.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this work as a significant contribution to the study of global administrative law and the socio-legal aspects of health policy. Readers frequently note the academic rigor of the comparative case studies and the clarity with which the authors bridge the gap between legal theory and practical public health outcomes.
Page Count:
357
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
ISBN-10:
0191664669
ISBN-13:
9780191664663
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