>
Gene Patents and Collaborative Licensing Models: Patent Pools, Clearing Houses, Open Source Models and Liability Regimes (Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law)

Gene Patents and Collaborative Licensing Models: Patent Pools, Clearing Houses, Open Source Models and Liability Regimes (Cambridge Intellectual Property and Information Law)

  • £31.69
  • Save £77


Edited by Geertrui van Overwalle
Cambridge University Press, 6/11/2009
EAN 9780521896733, ISBN10: 0521896738

Hardcover, 516 pages, 23.5 x 15.5 x 2.7 cm
Language: English

Concerns have been expressed that gene patents might result in restricted access to research and health care. The exponential growth of patents claiming human DNA sequences might result in patent thickets, royalty stacking and, ultimately, a 'tragedy of the anti-commons' in genetics. The essays in this book explore models designed to render patented genetic inventions accessible for further use in research, diagnosis or treatment. The models include patent pools, clearing house mechanisms, open source structures and liability regimes. They are analysed by scholars and practitioners in genetics, law, economics and philosophy. The volume looks beyond theoretical and scholarly analysis by conducting empirical investigation of existing examples of collaborative licensing models. Those models are examined from a theoretical perspective and tested in a set of operational cases. This combined approach is unique in its kind and prompts well founded and realistic solutions to problems in the current gene patent landscape.

Part I. Patent Pools
1. Patent pooling for gene-based diagnostic testing
conceptual framework Birgit Verbeure
2. Case 1. The MPEG LA® licensing model. What problem does it solve in biopharma and genetics? Lawrence A. Horn
3. Case 2. IP fragmentation and patent pools
the SARS case Carmen E. Correa
4. Critical analysis of patent pools Jorge A. Goldstein
Part II. Clearing Houses
5. Clearinghouse mechanisms in genetic diagnostics
conceptual framework Esther van Zimmeren
6. Case 3. The global biodiversity information facility. An example of an information clearinghouse James L. Edwards
7. Case 4. BirchBob
an example of a technology exchange clearing house Esther van Zimmeren and Dirk Avau
8. Case 5. The public intellectual property resource for agriculture. A standard license public sector clearinghouse for agricultural IP Alan B. Bennett and Sara Boettiger
9. Case 6. The science commons material transfer agreement project. A standard license clearing house? Thinh Nguyen
10. Case 7. The collective management of copyright and neighbouring rights. An example of a royalty collection clearing house Jan Corbet
11. Comment on the conceptual framework for a clearing house mechanism Michael Spence
Part III. Open Source
12. Open source genetics
a conceptual framework Janet Hope
13. Case 8. CAMBIA's biological open source initiative (BiOS) Nele Berthels
14. Case 9. Diversity Arrays Technology Pty Ltd.
applying the open source philosophy in agriculture Andrzej Kilian
15. Critical commentary on 'open source' in the life sciences Arti K. Rai
16. Several kinds of 'should'
the ethics of open source in life sciences innovation Antony Taubman
Part IV. Liability Regimes
17. Pathways across the valley of death
novel intellectual property strategies for accelerated drug discovery Arti K. Rai, Jerome H. Reichman, Paul F. Uhlir and Colin Crossman
18. Case 10. The international treaty on plant genetic resources for food and agriculture
the standard material transfer agreement as implementation of a limited compensatory liability regime Victoria Henson-Apollonio
19. Critical analysis of property rules, liability rules and molecular futures
bargaining in the shadow of the cathedral Dan L. Burk
Part V. Different Perspectives
20. Gene patents
from discovery to invention. A geneticist's view Gert Matthijs and Gert-Jan Van Ommen
21. 'Patent Tsunami' in the field of genetic diagnostics. A patent practitioner's view Jacques Warcoin
22. Gene patents and clearing models. Some comments from a competition law perspective Hanns Ullrich
23. Access to genetic patents and clearinghouse model. An economic perspective Reiko Aoki
24. The role of law, institutions and governance in facilitating access to the scientific research commons. A philosopher's perspective Tom Dedeurwaerdere
Part VI. Concluding Thoughts
25. Of thickets, blocks and gaps
designing tools to resolve obstacles in the gene patents landscape Geertrui van Overwalle.