Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2-2023
Journal Title
Hastings Law Journal
ISSN
0017-8322
Abstract
This Article examines an unprecedented proposal that India and South Africa submitted to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in October 2020, which called for a waiver of more than 30 provisions in the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights to help combat COVID-19. It begins by recounting the proposal's strengths and weaknesses. The Article then identifies the challenges surrounding the negotiation and implementation of the proposed waiver. It shows why these two sets of challenges were neither separate nor sequential, but deeply entangled at the time of the international negotiations.
To respond to these challenges and the negotiation impasse at the WTO, this Article advances an alternative proposal that calls for the deferral of select intellectual property rights in pandemic times. Aiming to "split the difference" between the proponents and opponents of the waiver, the proposal draws support from precedents involving temporal adjustments to intellectual property rights at both the international and domestic levels. The Article concludes by exploring the proposal's scope, strengths and limitations.
First Page
489
Last Page
550
Num Pages
62
Volume Number
74
Issue Number
2
Publisher
University of California Hastings College of Law
Recommended Citation
Peter K. Yu,
Deferring Intellectual Property Rights in Pandemic Times,
74
Hastings L.J.
489
(2023).
Available at:
https://scholarship.law.tamu.edu/facscholar/1682
File Type
Included in
Health Law and Policy Commons, Intellectual Property Law Commons, International Trade Law Commons