More books for review

JIPLP has a vigorous and proactive policy regarding book reviews, inviting suitable prospective reviewers to step forward and offer to review books within their field of expertise and asking them to return them if, within a fairly short time, they have not committed themselves to delivering a reasoned and publishable review.

If you think you are suitably qualified by experience or interest to write a review on one of the following, please email Sarah Harris at sarah.harris@oup.com and let her know, by not later than Wednesday 8 October. If you are not already known to us, do please let us have sight of a short CV.

Books currently available for review are as follows:

Title: The Protection of Geographical Indications: Law and Practice 
Author: Michael Blakeney
Publisher: Edward Elgar
The Protection Of Geographical Indications examines from a practitioner's perspective the European laws concerning the protection of geographical indications and geographical trade marks. The book expertly annotates the 2012 European regulation on quality schemes for agricultural products and foodstuffs, the proposed amendments to the Community Trade Marks Regulation on certification marks and the new Customs Regulation which deals with the counterfeiting of geographical indications.
Further information is available from the book's web page here

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Title: Intellectual Property, Unfair Competition and Publicity: Convergences and Development
Editors: Nari Lee and others
Publisher: Edward Elgar
Dealing with rights and developments at the margin of classic intellectual property, this fascinating book explores emerging types of regulations and how existing IP regimes inform and influence the judicial and legislative creation of “substitute” IP rights.   
The editors have carefully structured the book to ensure that there is a thorough analysis of how commercial values arising at the margins of classic IP rights are regulated. As new regimes of regulations emerge, the question of how existing IP regimes inform and influence the judicial and legislative creation of “substitute” intellectual property rights is explored. By doing this, the contributors interrogate the very boundaries that constitute what IP rights traditionally protect and cover. Should all investments in anything intangible and “intellectual” – such as product shapes, personality, data and organization of an event - be protected as property? Should there be qualitative differences among the types of investments and achievements? These are just some of the interesting questions addressed in this important new book.
Further information is available from the book's web page here

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Title: Comic Art, Creativity and the Law
Author: Marc H Greenberg
Publisher: Edward Elgar
The characters and stories found in comic art play a dominant role in contemporary popular culture throughout the world. In this first-of-its-kind work, Comic Art, Creativity and the Law examines how law and legal doctrine shapes the creative process as applied to comic art.

The book examines the impact of contract law, copyright law (including termination rights, parody and ownership of characters), tax law and obscenity law has on the creative process. It considers how these laws enhance and constrain the process of creating comic art by examining the effect their often inconsistent and incoherent application has had on the lives of creators, retailers and readers of comic art. It uniquely explains the disparate results in two key comic book parody cases, the Winter Brothers case and the Air Pirates case, offering an explanation for the seemingly inconsistent results in those cases. Finally, it offers a detailed discussion and analysis of the history and operation of the ‘work for hire’ doctrine in copyright law and its effect on comic art creators.
Further information is available from the book's web page here

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Title: Intellectual Property for Economic Development
Editors: Sanghoon Ahn and others
Publisher: Edward Elgar
Protection of intellectual property rights (IPRs) serves a dual role in economic development. While it promotes innovation by providing legal protection of inventions, it may retard catch-up and learning by restricting the diffusion of innovations. Does stronger IPR protection in a developing country encourage technology development in or technology transfer to that country? This book aims to address the issue, covering diverse forms of IPRs, varied actors in innovation, and multiple case studies from Asia and Latin America. IPRs and their interaction with other factors such as such as the quality of knowledge institutions (e.g. academia, public research institutes or industrial research centres such as science parks), availability of trained human capital, and networks for research collaboration or interaction (e.g. university-industry research collaboration or international collaboration) in a development context, is the subject of this book. )
Further information is available from the book's web page here

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