1. | Haugen, Hans Morten : The right to food and the TRIPS agreement, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph The right to food and the TRIPS agreement : with a particular emphasis on developing countries' measures for food production and distribution / Haugen, Hans Morten - (The Raoul Wallenberg Institute : Human Rights Library ; vol. 30 ), xii, 506 p.. - Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff publ., 2007. ISBN 978-90-04-16184-9 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Table of contents:. Preface; Part I: Treaties Relating to Food and Protection of Biotechnology: 1 Introduction; 2 Food, Biotechnology and Intellectual Property ; 3 Methodology: Principles and Sources under International Law. Part II: Relevant Provisions from the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: 4 Specifying the Nature of the Obligations and the Approach for Understanding Economic, Social and Cultural Human Rights; 5 The Right to Food as Recognized in the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights; 6 The Right to Benefit from the Moral and Material Interests of Scientific Production and the Right to Enjoy Benefits from Scientific Progress and Its Applications; 7 The Justifiable Limitations to the Recognized Rights. Part III: TRIPS and TRIPS-Compatible Protection: 8 The TRIPS Agreement, Particularly Patent Protection; 9 Effective Sui Generis Systems for the Protection of New Varieties of Plants. Part IV: Comparison between Measures to Realize the Right to Food and Measures to Strengthen Patent and Plant Variety Protection:10 Jurisdictional and Jurisprudential Issues under the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the TRIPS Agreement; 11 Principles for Identifying and Solving Conflicts between Treaties, as well as Identifying the Nature of Treaties, Applied to TRIPS and the Covenant; 12 Conflict or Compatibility between Human Rights and Patent and Plant Variety Protection?; Part V: Conclusions; Acronyms; Symbols; Definitions; Table of Cases; Literature; Index. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Doha declaration on TRIPS and public health; UN charter; Convention on biological diversity (CBD); ICESCR; |
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2. | Ebbesson, Jonas (ed.) : Environmental law and justice in context, 2009 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Environmental law and justice in context / Ebbesson, Jonas (ed.) ; Okowa, Phoebe, xii, 483 p.. - Cambridge : Cambridge U. P., 2009. ISBN 978-0-521-87968-2 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction: dimensions of justice in environmental law, by Jonas Ebbesson. Part I. The Notion of Justice in International Law:. 2. The second cycle of ecological urgency: an environmental justice perspective, by Richard Falk. 3. Describing the elephant: international justice and environmental law, by Dinah Shelton. 4. Law, justice and rights: some implications of a global perspective, by William Twining. 5. Gender and environmental law and justice?: thoughts on sustainable masculinities, by Hanne Petersen. Part II. Public Participation and Access to the Judiciary:. 6. Participatory rights in natural resource management: the role of communities in South Asia, by Jona Razzaque. 7. Public participation and the challenges of environmental justice in China, by Qun Du. 8. Environmental justice through courts in countries in economic transition, by Stephen Stec. 9. Environmental justice through environmental courts?: lessons learned from the Swedish experience, by Jan Darpö. 10. Environmental justice in the European Court of Justice, by Ludwig Krämer. 11. Environmental justice through international complaints procedures?: comparing the Aarhus Convention and the North American Agreement on Environmental Cooperation, by Malgosia Fitzmaurice. Part III. State Sovereignty and State Borders:. 12. Environmental justice in situations of armed conflict, by Phoebe Okowa. 13. Sovereignty and environmental justice in international law, by André Nollkaemper. 14. Piercing the state veil in the pursuit of environmental justice, by Jonas Ebbesson. Part IV. North-South Concerns in Global Contexts: 15. Competing narratives of justice in north-south environmental relations: the case of ozone layer depletion, by Karin Mickelson. 16. Climate change, global environmental justice and international environmental law, by Jutta Brunée. 17. Justice in global environmental negotiations: the case of desertification, by Bo Kjellén. Part V. Access to Natural Resources:. 18. Distributive justice and procedural fairness in global water law, by Ellen Hey. 19. Environmental justice in the use, knowledge and exploitation of genetic resources, by Philippe Cullet. 20. Law, gender and environmental resources: women's access to environmental justice in east Africa, by Patricia Kameri-Mbote. Part VI. Corporate Activities and Trade:. 21. The polluter pays principle: dilemmas of justice in national and international contexts, by Hans Christian Bugge. 22. Corporate activities and environmental justice: perspectives on Sierra Leone's mining, by Priscilla Schwartz. 23. Environmental justice and international trade law, by Nicolas de Sadeleer. INDEX WORDS:
GEOGRAPHICAL TERMS: Australia / Austria / Bangladesh / Belgium / Bolivia / Brazil / Bulgaria / Congo / China / Denmark / East Africa / East Timor / Egypt / Finland / Germany / Greenland / Iraq / Iran / Ireland / Kenya / Liberia / Mongolia / Norway / Pakistan / Portugal / Russian Federation / Sierra Leone / South Asia / South Korea / Spain / Sri Lanka / Tanzania / Uganda / Ukraine / United Kingdom / USA / Viet Nam NOTE (GENERAL): Aarhus convention; Charter of economic rights and duties of states; UN charter; Convention on biological diversity;ICESCR; Espoo convention; Kyoto protocol; Montreal protocol; Framework convention on climate change; Rio declaration; Stockholm declaration; World charter of nature; LIBRARY LOCATION: Domvillan SHELF CODE: Miljörätt |
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3. | Joerges, Christian (ed.) : Constitutionalism, multilevel trade governance and social regulation, 2006 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Constitutionalism, multilevel trade governance and social regulation / Joerges, Christian (ed.) ; Petersmann, Ernst-Ulrich - (Studies in international trade law ; no. 9), xxxviii, 554 p.. - Oxford : Hart publ., 2006 . ISBN 1-84113-665-4 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: Contents:. Introduction. Section I: International Trade Law: Constitutionalisation and Judicialisation in the WTO and Beyond. Section I.1: Constitutionalisation and the WTO: Two Competing Visions from Two Different Disciplines. 1. Multilevel Trade Governance in the WTO Requires Multilevel Constitutionalism, by Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann. 2. Democratic Legitimacy of Transnational Trade Governance: A View from Political Theory, by Patrizia Nanz. Section I.2. Judicialisation: Empirical Inquiries and Constitutional Concerns: 3. Dispute Settlement under GATT and WTO: An Empirical Enquiry into a Regime Change, by Achim Helmedach and Bernhard Zangl. 4. The Appellate Body’s ‘Response’ to the Tensions and Interdependencies Between Transnational Trade Governance and Social Regulation, by Christiane Gerstetter. Section I.3: Participatory Governance: Emerging Patterns and their Juridification:. 5. Why Co-operate? Civil Society Participation at the WTO, by Jens Steffek and Claudia Kissling. 6. Participatory Transnational Governance, by Rainer Nickel. Section I.4 Legalisation Patterns outside the WTO:. 7. Non-Traditional Patterns of Global Regulation: Is the WTO ‘Missing the Boat’?, by Joost Pauwelyn. 8. Conflicts and Comity in Transnational Governance:. Private International Law as Mechanism and Metaphor for Transnational Social Regulation through Plural Legal Regimes, by Robert Wai. Section II: Transnational Governance Arrangements for Product Safety:. Section II.1 Food Safety Regulation: the SPS Agreement and the Codex Alimentarius. 9. Fixing the Codex? Global Food-Safety Governance Under Review, by Thorsten Hüller and Matthias Leonhard Maier. 10. The Precautionary Principle in Support of Practical Reason: an Argument Against Formalistic Interpretations of the Precautionary Principle, by Alexia Herwig. 11. Beyond the Science/Democracy Dichotomy: The World Trade Organisation Sanitary and Phytosanitary Agreement and Administrative Constitutionalism, by Elizabeth Fisher. 12. Administrative Globalisation and Curbing the Excesses of the State, by Damian Chalmers. Section II.2 The TBT Agreement and International Standardisation:. 13. A New Device for creating International Legal Normativity: The WTO Technical Barriers to Trade Agreement and ‘International Standards', by Robert Howse. 14. The Empire’s Drains: Sources of Legal Recognition of Private Standardisation under the TBT Agreement, by Harm Schepel. Section III The WTO and Transnational Environmental Governance:. 15. Global Environmental Governance and the WTO: Emerging Rulesthrough Evolving Practice: The CBD-Bonn Guidelines, by Christine Godt. 16. Environmental Policies and the WTO Committee on Trade and Environment: A Record of Failure?, by Ulrike Ehling. 17. Facing the Global Hydra: Ecological Transformation at the Global Financial Frontier: The Ambitious Case of the Global Reporting Initiative, by Oren Perez. Section IV Epilogue:. 18. Constitutionalism in Postnational Constellations: Contrasting Social Regulation in the EU and in the WTO, by Christian Joerges. INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): UN charter; ECHR; EU charter of fundamental rights; EC treaty; EU constitution;
URL http://www.hartpub.co.uk/books/details.asp?isbn=9781841136653 |
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4. | Haugen, Hans Morten : Beskyttelse av tradisionell kunnskap for planter og plantefordeling, 2007 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: part of a serial Beskyttelse av tradisionell kunnskap for planter og plantefordeling : status, muligheter og framtidsutsikter / Haugen, Hans Morten REFERENCE TO GENERIC UNIT (Periodica): Retfaerd : nordisk juridisk tidsskrift : 30. årg. nr. 1/116., p. 85-98. - Copenhagen : Akademisk forlag, 2007. - ISSN 0105-1121 LANGUAGE: SWE INDEX WORDS:
NOTE (GENERAL): Convention on biological diversity;
URL http://www.retfaerd.org/gamle_pdf/2007/1/Retfaerd_116_2007_1_s85_98.pdf |
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5. | Grosheide, Willem (ed.) : Intellectual property and human rights, 2010 |
BIBLIOGRAPHIC LEVEL: monograph Intellectual property and human rights : a paradox / Grosheide, Willem (ed.), ix, 317 p.. - Cheltenham : Edward Elgar, 2010. ISBN 978-1-84844-447-8 LANGUAGE: ENG ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:. PART I: SETTING THE STAGE: THE LAW AND ITS TRENDS:. 1. General Introduction, by Willem Grosheide. 2. Human Rights Law Status Report, by Cees Flinterman. 3. Expansion and Convergence in Copyright Law, by Madeleine de Cock Buning. 4. Patents and Human Rights: Where is the Paradox?, by Rochelle Cooper Dreyfuss. PART II: INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS AS HUMAN RIGHTS:. 5. Introduction, by Jerzy Koopman. COPYRIGHT LAW AND PATENT LAW: TO ITS RECOGNITION – DIFFERING VIEWS:. 6. Is Copyright Fit for the 21st Century? No!, by Joost Smiers. 7. Intellectual Property Rights, Human Rights and the Right to Health, by Duncan Matthews. 8. On Patents and Human Rights, by Jan Brinkhof. 9. Current Patent Laws Cannot Claim the Backing of Human Rights, by Wendy J. Gordon. PART III: HUMAN RIGHTS AS RESTRICTIONS TO INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY RIGHTS:. 10. Introduction, by Lucky Belder. COPYRIGHT LAW AND PATENT LAW: TO ITS ENFORCEMENT – DIFFERING VIEWS:. 11. A Practical Analysis of the Human Rights Paradox in Intellectual Property Law: Russian Roulette, by Charlotte Waelde and Abbe E.L. Brown. 12. Human Rights’ Limitations in Patent Law, by Geertrui Van Overwalle. 13. Human Rights as a Constraint on Intellectual Property Rights: The Case of Patent and Plant Variety Protection Rights, Genetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge, by Charles R. McManis. 14. A Comment on ‘Human Rights as a Constraint on Intellectual Property Rights: The Case of Patent and Plant Variety Protection Rights, Genetic Resources and Traditional Knowledge’, by Martin J. Adelman. INDEX WORDS:
URL http://www.e-elgar.com/Bookentry_DESCRIPTION.lasso?id=13509 |