About the Book
Table of Contents:
Part 1: International Treaties
- 1. A Proposal for an International Treaty on Copyright Limitations and Exceptions for Education and Research (Faith Majekolagbe)
- 2. Breeders’ and Farmers’ Rights: Navigating the Tension Between UPOV and UNDROP (Enrico Bonadio, Cheryl Dine, Mauro Barelli)
- 3. TRIPS and its Futures (Peter Yu)
Part 2: Canadian IP Law
- 4. Putting Copyright in its Place: How Copyright History Can Help Chart the Future of the Global IP System (Sara Bannerman, Myra Tawfik)
- 5. Protection of AI-Generated Images in Canadian Copyright Law: Charting a Narrow Path to Originality (Cody Rei-Anderson)
- 6. Artificial Intelligence Generated Inventions and the Quest for a Normative Framework (Bassem Awad)
- 7. Tribulations of Open-Ended Concepts in Copyright Law (Mistrale Goudreau)
- 8. The Uncertain Future of Patented Medicine Price Regulation (Greg Hagen)
Part 3: Traditional Cultural Expression and Indigenous legal traditions
- 9. Bottom-up Law-Making: A Critical Legal Pluralist’s View of a Soft-Legal Instrument for the Governance of Traditional Cultural Expressions (Anmol Patel)
- 10. The Performance of Law (Richard Overstall)
- 11. Thinking Differently: Creating Spaces of Autonomy for the Revitalization of Indigenous Legal Traditions in the Context of Copyright (Johnny Mack, Graham Reynolds)
Part 4: Technology and IP
- 12. International Source Code Secrecy and the Characterisation of Intellectual Property as National Security (Anthony Rosborough)
- 13. Location, Location, Location: the Future of IP in Light of Private International Law (Naama Daniel)
- 14. Artificial Intelligence and Challenges for the Patent System: An Economic Perspective (Luciano Póvoa, Andrea Cabello)
- 15. Owning Me, Owning You – How Private Companies Acquire Rights in Our Most Intimate Data (Andelka Phillips)
Part 5: IP, Inequality, and Human Rights
- 16. The Future of Geographical Indication Protection in Developing Countries – is it the Answer to Rural Development, Food Security and More? (David Watson)
- 17. Public Interest, Human Rights, and Copyright: The Road Less Travelled? (Lisa Macklem)
- 18. Unseen Hands, Invisible Rights: Unmasking Digital Workers in the Shadows of AI Innovation and Implications for the Future of Copyright Law (Teshager Dagne)
About the Author :
Bassem Awad (Contributor)
Bassem Awad is an Assistant Professor and Director of the Area of Concentration in Intellectual Property, Information and Technology law in the Faculty of Law at the University of Western Ontario.
Sara Bannerman (Contributor)
Sara Bannerman is Canada Research Chair in Communication Policy and Governance and Professor of Communication Studies at McMaster University.
Mauro Barelli (Contributor)
Mauro Barelli is Professor of International Law at City St George's University of London.
Enrico Bonadio (Contributor)
Enrico Bonadio is Professor of Law at City St George's University of London.
Andrea Cabello (Contributor)
Andrea Cabello is Associate professor at the Department of Economics at the University of Brasilia.
Naama Daniel (Contributor)
Naama Daniel is Research Fellow, Federmann Cyber Security Research Center Cyber
Law Program at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and Deputy Legal Adviser to the Economic Affairs Committee, the Israeli Parliament (on sabbatical).
Cheryl Dine (Contributor)
Cheryl Dine is a PhD candidate at City St George's University of London.
Mistrale Goudreau (Contributor)
Mistrale Goudreau is full professor at the Civil Law Section of the University of Ottawa.
Gregory Hagen (Contributor)
Gregory R. Hagen is Associate Professor of Law at the University of Calgary.
Johnny Mack (Contributor)
Johnny Mack (Haynahmeek, Toquaht Nation) is Assistant Professor at the Allard School of Law and Co-Director of Indigenous Legal Studies.
Lisa Macklem (Contributor)
Lisa Macklem is a legal scholar specializing in copyright, entertainment and media law.
Faith Majekolagbe (Contributor)
Faith O. Majekolagbe is Assistant Professor at the Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, and a Faculty Associate at Harvard University's Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society.
Richard Overstall (Contributor)
Richard Overstall is a former mining geologist who drifted into research for public-interest and indigenous groups, including coordinating
expert opinion evidence for the Gitxsan and Wet'suwet'en plaintiffs in the Delgamuukw aboriginal title trial.
Anmol Patel (Contributor)
Anmol Patel is a PhD candidate at the University of Ottawa and a Research Assistant with OpenAIR and ABS-Canada. He holds an LLM
from the University of Toronto and a BBA-LLB from India.
Andelka Phillips (Contributor)
Andelka M. Phillips is Academic Affiliate at HeLEX Centre, University of Oxford and an Affiliate at the Bioethics Institute Ghent, Ghent University.
Luciano Povoa (Contributor)
Luciano Pvoa is a Legislative Advisor for microeconomic policy at the Brazilian Federal Senate.
Cody Rei-Anderson (Contributor)
Cody Rei-Anderson is Lecturer in Law and Technology at Edinburgh Napier University.
Anthony Rosborough (Contributor)
Anthony D. Rosborough is Assistant Professor of Law & Computer Science at Dalhousie University and Doctoral Researcher at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy.
Myra Tawfik (Contributor)
Myra Tawfik is Distinguished University Professor and the inaugural Don Rodzik Family Chair in Law and Entrepreneurship at the University of Windsor.
David Watson (Contributor)
David J. Watson is a PhD candidate in Law at Peter A. Allard School of Law, at the University of British Columbia.
Peter Yu (Contributor)
Peter K. Yu is University Distinguished Professor, Regents Professor of Law and Communication, and Director of the Center for Law and Intellectual Property at Texas A&M University.
Graham J. Reynolds (Editor)
Graham Reynolds is Associate Professor at UBC's Peter A. Allard School of Law. Dr. Reynolds' teaching and research focus on the intersection of intellectual property and human rights.
Alexandra Mogyoros (Editor)
Alexandra Mogyoros is Assistant Professor at the Lincoln Alexander School of Law, Toronto Metropolitan University. Dr. Mogyoros' research focuses on trademark law, brands, trust, and expression in online spaces.
Teshager Dagne (Editor)
Teshager W. Dagne is Associate Professor at York University and holds an Ontario Research Chair in Governing Artificial Intelligence. Dr. Dagne's research and teaching focus on the intersections of AI, intellectual property, and development.
Review :
Imagining future possibilities for intellectual property, this international group of scholars address the multiple challenges of evolving technologies, increasing globalization, and widening inequalities. Intellectual property needs provocative and creative proposals like these to deliver on its promises of increasing access to knowledge for public benefit while responding to consequential changes.--Margaret Chon, aculty Co-Director, Technology, Innovation Law, and Ethics (TILE) Program Seattle University School of Law
In an era marked by unprecedented social and technological upheaval, this groundbreaking volume brings together a diverse cohort of established and emerging scholars to chart the future of intellectual property law. Weaving together law, values, ethics, and technology, their contributions form a vivid tapestry of innovation and possibility, offering profound insights into how IP law can rise to meet the challenges of our time.--Dr Teresa Scassa, Canada Research Chair in Information Law and Policy, University of Ottawa
Intellectual property has long raised complicated policy and legal challenges that cut across culture, expression, human rights, and international law. This exceptional collection brings together some of the leading scholars in the field from Canada and around the world to provide powerful insights into where the law stands today and - more importantly - where it may be headed tomorrow. Professors Reynolds, Mogyoros, and Dagne have shepherded a remarkable project that will undoubtedly influence thinking on the intersection between IP and a wide range of issues including health, artificial intelligence, and indigenous legal traditions.--Professor Michael A. Geist, Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law, University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law
IP's Futures offers a far-reaching exploration of the places intellectual property (IP) may be headed. It covers all the predominant areas of copyright, patent, and trademark law, and also highlights frontier topics reshaping the field. Control over information is assessed in new ways, linking trade secrecy with national security, assessing the protection of intimate data, interrogating drug price regulation, and recognizing private ordering across borders. Legal pluralism is central to the collection of well-integrated enquiries, illuminating the role of Indigenous law alongside other knowledge governance systems. Rather than simply re-hashing established debates, these chapters push the boundaries of our thinking, empowering readers to both understand and shape the emerging issues in IP.
A key strength of this collection is how it contextualizes the major forces driving change in IP. Technological shifts are examined with particular emphasis on artificial intelligence. Economic transformations--including labour practices and the future of work--are also scrutinized through analysis of agricultural production and rural development. The contributors delve into geopolitical dynamics, reflecting on global economic integration, international trade, and how these factors reverberate across the IP ecosystem. Alongside these technological, economic, and political perspectives, the collection grapples with social issues such as inequality and access to knowledge. It offers fresh lenses for understanding how rights-based frameworks may be viewed from different perspectives, ultimately championing more inclusive and justice-oriented approaches.
Equally notable is the multidisciplinary foundation of IP's Futures. Contributors include scholars of history who contextualize the basis of IP systems, economists who dissect the drivers of creativity and invention, and scholars from the fields of health and computer sciences who help shed light on different aspects of data governance. By synthesizing insights from such fields, the collection underscores the richness of collaboration and the necessity of seeing IP through multiple vantage points.
Finally, IP's Futures also represents an intergenerational conversation, including established authorities in IP alongside bright-shining emerging scholars. The collection proves that the future of the field lies not only in fresh subjects of inquiry, but in the innovative thinkers themselves. As a result, this collection is indispensable for those who want a rich, forward-looking perspective on IP's evolution--one that can guide policy, practice, and scholarship for years to come.
Jeremy de Beer
Ottawa, January 2025.
--Jeremy de Beer FRSC, Canada Research Chair in Innovation and Intellectual Property Law, Full Professor, Faculty of Law, University of Ottawa