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RECENT MULTILATERAL AND BILATERAL
TRENDS IN IP POLICY MAKING: LESSONS AND CHALLENGES FOR AFRICA
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Cape Town, South Africa
6th of October 2006 Workshop organized by CIEL, ICTSD, and TRALAC Free trade agreements (FTAs) are mushrooming at the regional and bilateral level. According to the World Bank, (See "Global Economic Perspectives, Trade, Regionalism, and Development", The World Bank, 2004.) the number of agreements in force now surpasses 250, and has increased six fold in just two decades. The principle driving force behind this trend has been the USA, which has led the emergence of a new generation of FTAs that include comprehensive chapters on intellectual property (IP) going well beyond the WTO's TRIPS Agreement ("TRIPS-plus"). The United States Trade Representative (USTR) is further negotiating a number of FTAs under the Trade Promotion Authority (TPA), which is to expire in July 2007,. On their part, the EU and EFTA have also been active in producing trade agreements with different emphases on IP issues. It is expected that the EU and EFTA bilateral models might become more aggressive in certain areas such as geographical indications and trademarks, UPOV-like plant variety protection, and increased enforcement. While FTAs might offer important market access opportunities in developed countries a number of experts have expressed concerns that TRIPS-plus provisions reduce the opportunities to use flexibilities and exceptions that have been designed to safeguard certain public interest objectives and, for LDCs, remove any developmental benefits from the extension of the TRIPS transition period. Obligations in this new generation of FTAs raise many implementation challenges regarding policy coherence and maintenance of flexibilities left in those agreements. At the same time, most developing countries are still struggling to implement the minimum standards of the TRIPS Agreement. Against this background, the Center for International Environmental Law
(CIEL) and its partners, Trade
Law Centre for Southern Africa (tralac) and the International
Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD), are convening
a workshop with the following objectives:
Download: The registration form (DOC 50.5Kb). For more information see: http://www.tralac.org/scripts/content.php?id=5149 Contact: Dalindyebo Shabalala, Director, Intellectual Property and Sustainable Development Project, CIEL (dshabalala@ciel.org)
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