20110478 - Intellectual Property Law

In this course we will examine the relevant international and European law governing the two major areas of intellectual property, patents and copyright with a view to understanding their role in regulating technological development. The course will focus on the way in which the law understands and balances the competing rights of technology creators, technology users and the owners of intellectual property rights in that technology. It will examine the extent to which the balance achieved by intellectual property law favours societal interests in technological innovation.
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Programme

Introduction to the themes of the course

History and Theory of Intellectual Property

Intellectual Property Harmonization at the International and European Levels I: From the Paris Convention of 1883 to the Marrakesh Treaty of 2013

Intellectual Property Harmonization at the International and European Levels II: The World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-related Aspects of Intellectual Property

Intellectual Property Harmonization at the International and European Levels III: The EU Directives

Copyright I: Justifications and Central Concepts in Copyright I

Copyright II: Justifications and Central Concepts in Copyright II

Copyright III: Harmonization of Copyright at the International and European Levels

Copyright IV: The Subject Matter of Copyright

Copyright V: Authorship, Ownership and Duration

Copyright VI: The Rights of the Copyright Owner

Copyright VII: Defences to Copyright Infringement

Copyright VIII: Moral Rights

Copyright IX: Associated Rights

Confidential Information

Designs I: Scope of Design Right

Designs II: Relationship to Other Rights

Patents I: Justifications and Central Concepts in Patents

Patents II: Harmonization of Patents at the International and European Levels

Patents III: The Subject Matter of Patents

Patents IV: The Patent Application Process

Patents V: Requirements for Patentability

Patents VI: Ownership

Patents VII: Infringement and Defences to Infringement

Patents VIII: Compulsory Licences and Related Rights

Trade Marks I: Central Concepts in Trade Marks at the International and European Levels

Trade Marks II: Subject Matter and Registration of Trade Marks

Trade Marks III: Subject Matter and Registration of Trade Marks (cont)

Trade Marks IV: Infringement and Defences to Infringement

Revision and Distribution of Assignment


Core Documentation

L Bently et al, Intellectual Property Law (Oxford University Press, 6th ed, 2022)

Reference Bibliography

F Macmillan, Intellectual and Cultural Property: Between Market and Community (Routledge, 2021)

Attendance

The course is taught in the second semester in three two hour seminars per week.

Type of evaluation

The course will be assessed by an assignment of 2,500 words that will be distributed at the end of the class on Monday 27 May and must be to fionaelizabeth.macmillan@uniroma3.it in word or PDF format on the email address above on or before 12 noon on Wednesday 5 June.