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An Emerging Intellectual Property Paradigm
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Table of Contents

Contents:

Preface

PART I: INDUSTRIAL PROPERTY
1. The Challenge of Trademark Law in Canada’s Federal and Bijural System
Teresa Scassa

2. A Watershed Year for Well Known or Famous Marks
Robert G. Howell

3. Canada’s Treatment of Geographical Indications: Compliant or Defiant? An International Perspective
Dianne Daley

4. From Pasteur to Monsanto: Approaches to Patenting Life in Canada
Mark Perry

5. Canadian Pharmaceutical Patent Policy: International Constraints and Domestic Priorities
Mélanie Bourassa Forcier and Jean-Frédéric Morin

PART II: COPYRIGHT
6. Canadian Colonial Copyright: The Colony Strikes Back
Pierre-Emmanuel Moyse

7. Canadian Originality: Remarks on a Judgment in Search of an Author
Abraham Drassinower

8. Moral Rights in Canada: An Historical and Comparative View
Elizabeth Adeney

9. A Uniquely Canadian Institution: The Copyright Board of Canada
Daniel J. Gervais

PART III: OVERLAPPING ISSUES
10. Battleground Between New and Old Orders: Control Conflicts Between Copyright and Personal Data Protection
Margaret Ann Wilkinson

11. When Intellectual Property Rights Converge – Tracing the Contours and Mapping the Fault Lines ‘Case by Case’ and ‘Law by Law’
Myra J. Tawfik

12. Surfacing: The Canadian Intellectual Property Identity
Ysolde Gendreau

Index

About the Author

Edited by Ysolde Gendreau, Professor of Law, Université de Montréal, Canada

Reviews

‘An Emerging Intellectual Property Paradigm is a definitive guide to the creative, cosmopolitan, cool-headed, and compassionate jurisprudence of Canadian intellectual property law. This volume shows that Canadian intellectual property law is an eclectic blend of British, French, and American legal traditions. After a pattern of resistance and accommodation, the legal system has internalised a variety of foreign influences. This collection explores the unique innovations of Canadian intellectual property law - such as its pioneering development of moral rights; the robust Copyright Board of Canada; and the Jean Chretien Pledge to Africa Act. Canadian intellectual property law has much to teach the rest of the world forging a "Middle Way" between the extremes of intellectual property maximalism and free-for-all piracy and counterfeiting.'
*Matthew Rimmer, The Australian National University College of Law, Australia*

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