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WIPO's International Registration of Trademarks: An International Administrative Act Subject to Examination by the Designated Contracting Parties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2019

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Although the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) is a technical intergovernmental organization with a limited mandate, it has been entrusted with a panoply of tasks. These include, inter alia, the international harmonization of intellectual property law, the administration of fee-based global intellectual property protection services, and the delivery of dispute resolution services to individuals. While the central role of WIPO in the continuous development of substantive intellectual property law has been questioned by developing countries, the administrative activities of WIPO have remained largely unscathed by critique and, therefore, have not attracted much attention. They revolve around the international filing, registration or recognition of industrial property rights, such as patents, industrial designs and trademarks, and provide an interesting perspective on the law of international institutions.

Type
Thematic Studies
Copyright
Copyright © 2008 by German Law Journal GbR 

References

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73 In the fifteenth to eighteenth centuries, this was even more conspicuous. Patents were granted to individuals by the sovereign in the form of “privileges”; see WIPO (note 5), 17.Google Scholar

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