Research Handbook on Intellectual Property and Competition Law

Front Cover
Josef Drexl
Edward Elgar Publishing, Jan 1, 2010 - Law - 512 pages
The volume offers an outstanding collection of studies on the interaction of IP and competition policy and is highly recommended for academics, graduate students, and practitioners with an interest in more theoretical studies. Ioannis Lianos, World Compet
 

Contents

Competition law and intellectual poperty rights outline of an economicsbased approach
3
Is there a more economic approach to intellectual property and competition law?
27
The contestability of IPprotected markets
54
Assessing the effects of intellectual property rights in network standards
80
The new EC competition law framework for technology transfer and IP licensing
107
Patent pools policy and problems
139
The competitive effects of patent fieldofuse licences
162
Patent and knowhow licences under the Japanese Antimonopoly Act
201
Making antitrust and intellectual property policy in the United States requirements tieins and loyalty discounts
258
New technologies and mergers
283
Limiting IP protection for competition policy reasons a case study based on the EU sparepartsdesign discussion
313
One none or a hundred thousand how many layers of protection for software innovations?
346
Development of the economics of copyright
373
Intellectual property the internal market and competition law
405
The exhaustioncompetition interface in EC law is there room for a holistic approach?
427
Competition policy and intellectual property in the WTO more guidance needed?
451

Unilateral refusal to license indispensable intellectual poperty rights US and EU approaches
215
Patent power and market power rethinking the relationship between intellectual property rights and market power in antitrust analysis
239

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About the author (2010)

Edited by Josef Drexl, Director, Max Planck Institute for Innovation and Competition, Munich, Germany

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