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Patents, Copyrights and Knowledge Governance: the next four years
Date: 12-13 January 2009
Venue: Carnegie Institution of Washington • 1530 P Street NW • Washington, DC
20005
For further information on this event, please visit the TACD intellectual
property working group blog
As a new Administration will take office in Washington, and the European Union renews its institutions, what should the political agenda be for intellectual property?
The globalisation of the challenges faced by consumers and rights holders have made intellectual property policy one of the main features of global trade policy, and stimulated both international and domestic debates about how best to promote innovation and access to knowledge, including "knowledge embedded" goods such as medicine, software, agriculture, inventions that address climate change, scholarly research, databases, films or recorded music.
Both the United States and the European Union are facing demands to modify policies on patents, copyrights and other forms of intellectual property protection, coming from different perspectives. There are high profile right-owner lobbying efforts directed at higher standards and tougher enforcement of intellectual property rights, and growing interest among consumer groups, academics and many innovative businesses to protect the public domain and retain or even expand user rights. There is also much interest in exploring newer approaches to the support of creative and inventive communities, that do not rely on notions of exclusive rights.
With the organisation of this event, the TransAtlantic Consumer Dialogue calls for two days of discussion on the assessment and on the prospective of the American and European political and policy Agenda on intellectual property practices and policies.
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To register, please send your name and organization name to tacd@consint.org with the subject heading "TACD conference"
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Speakers and moderators will include:
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Jill Johnstone, Consumer Focus
James Love, KEI
Professor Joseph Stiglitz, Columbia University
Professor Eric Maskin, Institute for Advanced Studies
Professor Arti Rai, Duke University
Professor Hugh Hansen, Fordham
Guilherme de Aguiar Patriota, Government of Brazil
Claudia Juech, Rockefeller Foundation
Tim Hubbard, Sanger Institute, Welcome Trust
Heather Joseph, Association of Research Libraries
Konstantinos Karachalios, European Patent Office
Gigi Sohn, Public Knowledge
Professor James Boyle, Duke
University
Professor Bernt Hugenholtz, Institute for Information Law of the
University of Amsterdam
William Patry, Google
Gene Kimmelman, Consumers
Union
Professor Josh Lerner, HBS, Harvard University
Dan Ravicher, Public Patent Foundation
Brad Biddle, Intel
Sherwin Siy, Public Knowledge
Professor Susan Sell, GWU
Dr Christophe Geiger, Max-Planck Institute, CEIPI
Eddan Katz, EFF
Anne-Catherine Lorrain, TACD
Professor Séverine Dusollier, CRID,
University
of
Namur
Philippe Aigrain, Sopinspace
Paul Levy, Public Citizen
Ed Mierzwinski, US PIRG
Bruce Perens
Professor Michael Kremer, Harvard University
Steve Merrill, NAS
Michelle Childs, MSF
Rohit Malpani, Oxfam
Rob Weissman, Essential Action
Judith Rius, KEI
Professor Anthony So, Duke University
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