Cite This        Tampung        Export Record
Judul Sustainability Objectives in Competition and Intellectual Property Law / editor PranveraKëllezi, Pierre Kobel, Bruce Kilpatrick,
Pengarang Këllezi, Pranvera
Kobel, Pierre
Kilpatrick, Bruce
Penerbitan Cham : Springer Nature, 2024
Deskripsi Fisik 415 p. :ilus
ISBN 9783031448683
Subjek PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW
SUSTAINABILITY
Abstrak This open access volume of LIDC contributions focuses on how competition and intellectual property laws incorporate sustainability objectives. Businesses are increasingly embracing sustainability objectives, driven by the international community. Although competition and intellectual property law are certainly not the only tools for addressing sustainability issues, they can play a role in moving toward a more sustainable society. Sustainability has gained prominence in competition law in all jurisdictions covered in this volume. The contributions focus on classic questions such as whether sustainability agreements restrict competition and, if so, to what extent businesses can be exempted on efficiency grounds. The papers also raise a number of questions, in particular concerning the treatment of non-market efficiencies. The soft law and case law produced by competition authorities are examined, and the leadership role of some competition authorities in the field – from advocacy to policy papers and sustainability guidelines – is highlighted. The authors call for more individual guidance to provide enhanced transparency and clarity to industry, advisors and society at large on sustainability issues, with guidelines or sustainability-related block exemptions providing even greater legal certainty. With regard to intellectual property, the contributions examine various important issues, such as the need for intellectual property rights to remain technology-neutral, ways to promote the use of sustainable technologies and incentives for licensing, and ways to promote the dissemination of sustainable technologies, including compulsory licensing, cross-licensing, open source or FRAND licensing, and replacing the destruction of counterfeit goods with recycling. The papers also discuss greenwashing and how it can be addressed through revisions to trademarks and related rights
Bentuk Karya Tidak ada kode yang sesuai
Target Pembaca Tidak ada kode yang sesuai
Lokasi Akses Online https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/134085

 
No Barcode No. Panggil Akses Lokasi Ketersediaan
521925192 341.69 Sus Baca Online Perpustakaan Pusat - Online Resources
Ebook
Tersedia
Tag Ind1 Ind2 Isi
001 INLIS000000000164968
005 20251016105658
007 ta
008 251016################|##########|#|##
020 # # $a 9783031448683
035 # # $a 0010-1025000248
082 # # $a 341.69
084 # # $a 341.69 Sus
245 # # $a Sustainability Objectives in Competition and Intellectual Property Law /$c editor PranveraKëllezi, Pierre Kobel, Bruce Kilpatrick,
260 # # $a Cham :$b Springer Nature,$c 2024
300 # # $a 415 p. : $b ilus
520 # # $a This open access volume of LIDC contributions focuses on how competition and intellectual property laws incorporate sustainability objectives. Businesses are increasingly embracing sustainability objectives, driven by the international community. Although competition and intellectual property law are certainly not the only tools for addressing sustainability issues, they can play a role in moving toward a more sustainable society. Sustainability has gained prominence in competition law in all jurisdictions covered in this volume. The contributions focus on classic questions such as whether sustainability agreements restrict competition and, if so, to what extent businesses can be exempted on efficiency grounds. The papers also raise a number of questions, in particular concerning the treatment of non-market efficiencies. The soft law and case law produced by competition authorities are examined, and the leadership role of some competition authorities in the field – from advocacy to policy papers and sustainability guidelines – is highlighted. The authors call for more individual guidance to provide enhanced transparency and clarity to industry, advisors and society at large on sustainability issues, with guidelines or sustainability-related block exemptions providing even greater legal certainty. With regard to intellectual property, the contributions examine various important issues, such as the need for intellectual property rights to remain technology-neutral, ways to promote the use of sustainable technologies and incentives for licensing, and ways to promote the dissemination of sustainable technologies, including compulsory licensing, cross-licensing, open source or FRAND licensing, and replacing the destruction of counterfeit goods with recycling. The papers also discuss greenwashing and how it can be addressed through revisions to trademarks and related rights
650 # # $a PUBLIC INTERNATIONAL LAW
650 # # $a SUSTAINABILITY
700 1 # $a Këllezi, Pranvera
700 1 # $a Kilpatrick, Bruce
700 1 # $a Kobel, Pierre
856 # # $a https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/134085
990 # # $a 521925192
Content Unduh katalog