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Patenting of Pharmaceuticals and Development in Sub-Saharan Africa [electronic resource] :Laws, Institutions, Practices, and Politics / by Poku Adusei.

by Adusei, Poku [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Berlin, Heidelberg : Springer Berlin Heidelberg : 2013.Description: XX, 294 p. online resource.ISBN: 9783642325151.Subject(s): Law | Pharmaceutical technology | Public health | Development Economics | Industrial organization (Economic theory) | Law | International IT and Media Law, Intellectual Property Law | Industrial Organization | Public Health | Pharmaceutical Sciences/Technology | International Economic Law, Trade Law | Development EconomicsDDC classification: 343.099 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
General introduction and overview -- Exploring the conceptual domains for patent discourse in global trade relations -- Evolutionary trajectories of patents and the politics of exclusion in Sub-Saharan Africa -- The ‘myth’ of patent justifications: triumph and failure dichotomy in the north and south -- Patent regulatory and institutional mechanisms in Sub-Saharan Africa -- Pharmaceutical patents, the right to health, and constitutional supremacy in Sub-Saharan Africa -- Pharmaceutical patents and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa -- General conclusions.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: This book critically investigates the patent protection of medication in light of the threats posed by HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis epidemics to the citizens of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (hereinafter “SSA” or “Africa”). The book outlines the systemic problems associated with the prevailing globalized patent regime and the regime’s inability to promote access to life-saving medication at affordable prices in SSA. It argues that for pharmaceutical patents to retain their relevance in SSA countries, human development concepts must be integrated into global patent law- and policy-making. An integrative approach implies developing additional public health and human development exceptions/limitations to the exercise of patent rights with the goal of scaling up access to medication that can treat epidemics in SSA. By drawing on multiple perspectives of laws, institutions, practices, and politics, the book suggests that SSA countries adopt an evidence-based approach to implementing global patent standards in domestic jurisdictions. This evidence-based approach would include mechanisms like local need assessments and the use of empirical data to shape domestic patent law-making endeavors. The approach also implies revising patent rules and policies with a pro-poor and pro-health emphasis, so that medication will be more affordable and accessible to the citizens of SSA countries. It also suggests considering the opinions of individuals and pro-access institutions in enacting crucial pieces of health-related statutes in SSA countries. The approach in this book is sensitive to the public health needs of the citizens affected by epidemics and to the imperative of building local manufacturing facilities for pharmaceutical research and development in SSA.
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General introduction and overview -- Exploring the conceptual domains for patent discourse in global trade relations -- Evolutionary trajectories of patents and the politics of exclusion in Sub-Saharan Africa -- The ‘myth’ of patent justifications: triumph and failure dichotomy in the north and south -- Patent regulatory and institutional mechanisms in Sub-Saharan Africa -- Pharmaceutical patents, the right to health, and constitutional supremacy in Sub-Saharan Africa -- Pharmaceutical patents and human development in Sub-Saharan Africa -- General conclusions.

This book critically investigates the patent protection of medication in light of the threats posed by HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis epidemics to the citizens of countries in Sub-Saharan Africa (hereinafter “SSA” or “Africa”). The book outlines the systemic problems associated with the prevailing globalized patent regime and the regime’s inability to promote access to life-saving medication at affordable prices in SSA. It argues that for pharmaceutical patents to retain their relevance in SSA countries, human development concepts must be integrated into global patent law- and policy-making. An integrative approach implies developing additional public health and human development exceptions/limitations to the exercise of patent rights with the goal of scaling up access to medication that can treat epidemics in SSA. By drawing on multiple perspectives of laws, institutions, practices, and politics, the book suggests that SSA countries adopt an evidence-based approach to implementing global patent standards in domestic jurisdictions. This evidence-based approach would include mechanisms like local need assessments and the use of empirical data to shape domestic patent law-making endeavors. The approach also implies revising patent rules and policies with a pro-poor and pro-health emphasis, so that medication will be more affordable and accessible to the citizens of SSA countries. It also suggests considering the opinions of individuals and pro-access institutions in enacting crucial pieces of health-related statutes in SSA countries. The approach in this book is sensitive to the public health needs of the citizens affected by epidemics and to the imperative of building local manufacturing facilities for pharmaceutical research and development in SSA.

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