Globalization and Access to Drugs - Health Economics and Drugs Series, No. 007
(1998; 97 pages) [French] [Spanish] Ver el documento en el formato PDF
Índice de contenido
Ver el documentoAcknowledgements
Ver el documentoAbbreviations and acronyms
Cerrar esta carpetaPART I: GLOBALIZATION AND ACCESS TO DRUGS: IMPLICATIONS OF THE WTO/TRIPS AGREEMENT
Ver el documentoExecutive summary
Ver el documentoIntroduction
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenido1. Brief historical background to the international trading system
Cerrar esta carpeta2. Reading the TRIPS Agreement from the perspective of access to drugs
Ver el documento2.1 General presentation of the Agreement
Ver el documento2.2 Fundamental principles and objectives of the Agreement: the necessary balance between intellectual property and accessibility
Ver el documento2.3 Patents for pharmaceutical products and processes available all over the world
Ver el documento2.4 Non-patentable inventions: biotechnology inventions
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenido2.5 Effects of protection: a monopoly of working for 20 years
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenido2.6 Application of the TRIPS Agreement
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenido2.7 During the transitional period
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenido2.8 How can the monopoly be limited?
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenido3. Conclusions: issues at stake and constraints on access to drugs
Ver el documentoDefinitions and terminology4
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoSelected bibliography5
Abrir esta carpeta y ver su contenidoPART II: PRESENTATIONS AT THE AD HOC WORKING GROUP ON THE REVISED DRUG STRATEGY HELD IN GENEVA ON 13 OCTOBER 1998
Ver el documentoOther documents in the DAP - Health Economics and Drugs Series
Ver el documentoBack cover
 

2.1 General presentation of the Agreement

A comprehensive Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights is annexed to the WTO convention. The objectives, set out in the introduction to the Agreement, are essentially aimed at strengthening and harmonizing certain aspects of the protection of intellectual property at the global level.

The Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (hereinafter the Agreement) covers both categories of intellectual property: literary and artistic property (copyright and neighbouring rights) and industrial property (trademarks*, patents*, geographical indications, industrial designs, and trade secrets).

These objectives are to be realized in two ways: firstly, the Agreement requires Member States to ensure minimum standards of protection for the various rights, leaving them the choice of how they achieve this. Secondly, WTO Members must make available procedures and remedies to permit the effective enforcement of IPRs by right holders (Part III of the Agreement, not discussed in this document). The minimum standards of protection are based on the basic provisions of the principal international conventions in force (Paris 1883 and Bern 1886, as revised) administered by WIPO, with which the TRIPS Agreement will coexist without taking their place. In all the areas it covers, the Agreement provides for the application of the principle of national treatment and of most-favoured-nation (MFN) treatment. The interests of developing countries are explicitly taken into account.

This Agreement, and particularly the section on patents, is probably the element of the Final Act of the Uruguay Round that will have the most important repercussions in the field of public health, especially for access to drugs in developing countries.

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Última actualización: le 3 mayo 2013