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Searching with a thematic focus on Intellectual Property Rights, Trade Policy
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Parallel imports of pharmaceutical products in the European Union
World Bank, 2001Paper studies the effects of parallel trade in the pharmaceutical industry.DocumentPost-TRIPS options for access to patented medicines in developing countries
Commission on Macroeconomics and Health, WHO, 2001Since developing countries spend a large percentage of their private household health expenditures on drugs, affordability of patented medicines is particularly important.DocumentIndigenous knowledge and institutions bibliography (Indiana)
Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, 1999DocumentIntellectual Property and Biodiversity News/Factsheets IATP)
Genetic Engineering & Intellectual Property Rights Resource Center, 1999Summary of news pertaining to intellectual property rights, biotechnology and biodiversity.DocumentHow does stronger protection of intellectual property rights affect seed supply?: early evidence of impact
Natural Resource Perspectives, ODI, 1999Is there evidence to indicate that early benefits have, in fact, been gained by the world s main biotechnology and seed companies? What will be the consequences for developing countries? Will IPR legislation result in better varieties becoming available more quickly? Will it encourage local plant breeding or will IPR predominantly strengthen the market position of foreign seed companies?DocumentAgricultural and rural development policy in Latin America: new directions and new challenges (de Janvry / Sadoulet / Key)
Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Berkeley, 1999DocumentThe Uruguay Round and South Asia : an overview of the impact and opportunities
Policy Research Working Papers, World Bank, 1995South Asia remains less liberal in trade policy than East Asia, including China. The Uruguay Round's most dramatic effect on South Asia will be the removal of non tariff barriers on the region's exports to the rest of the world.DocumentInvestment and the Final Act of the Uruguay Round: A Preliminary Stocktaking
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1999This paper aims to provide a preliminary stocktaking of the outcome of the Uruguay Round with regard to the treatment of investment. Doing so is difficult for a number of reasons, not least of which is the fact that investment per se was not placed formally on the negotiating agenda of the Round.DocumentTrade and Investment Interface
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, 1999This note was prepared in response to the request by the Working Party of the Trade Committee for follow - up to key questions arising from an earlier Secretariat note on the treatment of investment in the Uruguay Round.DocumentThe TRIPs Agreement: A Guide for the South: The Uruguay Round Agreement on Trade-Related Intellectual Property Rights
South Centre, 1997This document aims to contribute to an understanding of the factors that prompted the proposals for the TRIPs Agreement, to outline certain aspects of the Agreement thought to be particularly important for developing countries, and to point to some of the implications for these countries.Pages
