21世纪的知识产权:发展中国家是引领还是跟随?

J. Reichman
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引用次数: 68

摘要

发展中国家,特别是巴西、俄罗斯、印度和中国这四个金砖国家,应该以一种在可预见的未来使全球经济福利最大化的方式,使其国家创新体系适应《与贸易有关的知识产权协定》(TRIPS)通过后出现的全球知识产权(IP)制度。正如许多发达国家的经验所表明的那样,配置不当的、过度保护主义的知识产权制度扼杀了创新,因为它使对未来创新的投入过于昂贵、过于繁琐,难以长期维持。然而,经过深思熟虑的知识产权制度是保护创新型中小企业免受掠夺性大型竞争对手侵害的重要途径。新兴经济体面临的挑战是,在不引入发达国家自身未能解决的严重问题的情况下,抓住知识产权的好处。新兴经济体可以通过推行反协调政策来实现这种平衡,即利用管理知识产权的国际协议中现有的豁免,建立区域、地方和国际惯例,促进更创新、更灵活地使用知识产权。这些做法包括对知识产权的实验性使用的研究豁免、政府强加的非排他性许可、反封锁条款、基本设施原则和强制许可。其他工具包括针对小规模创新的事前赔偿责任规则制度,以及针对国内版权法专有权的合理例外,特别是针对科学和一般合理使用条款。新兴经济体将不得不克服强大的经济压力,接受更严格的知识产权制度作为自由贸易协定的一部分,同时还要克服技术专长和政府内部协调的缺乏。然而,新兴经济体已经积累了足够的经验,能够意识到各种知识产权计划的优缺点,以及它们自己根据当地需求定制知识产权的能力。发展中国家将需要利用这一经验,并在国际争端解决论坛上捍卫创新做法。通过创造性的、坚定的努力,发展中国家可以避免其他国家的知识产权滥用,同时建立知识产权规范,在当今数字化的科学话语世界中解决创造和创新的实际条件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intellectual Property in the Twenty-First Century: Will the Developing Countries Lead or Follow?
Developing countries, particularly the BRIC countries of Brazil, Russia, India, and China, should accommodate their national systems of innovation to the worldwide intellectual property (IP) regime emerging after the adoption of the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) in a way that maximizes global economic welfare in the foreseeable future. As many developed countries' experience demonstrates, badly configured, over-protectionist IP regimes stifle innovation by making inputs to future innovation too costly and too cumbersome to sustain over time. More carefully considered IP regimes, however, are an important way to protect innovative small- and medium-sized firms from predatory, larger competitors. The challenge is for emerging economies to capture the benefits of IP without importing the serious problems that developed countries have themselves failed to solve. Emerging economies can attain this balance by pursuing a policy of counter-harmonization in which they take advantage of existing exemptions in international agreements governing IP to establish regional, local, and international practices that promote more innovative, flexible uses of IP. Such practices include a research exemption for experimental uses of IP, government imposed nonexclusive licensing, anti-blocking provisions, an essential facilities doctrine, and compulsory licenses. Additional tools include an ex ante regime of compensatory liability rules for small scale innovation and sensible exceptions, particularly for science as well as general fair use provisions, to the exclusive rights of domestic copyright laws. Emerging economies will have to overcome strong economic pressure to accept more restrictive IP regimes as part of free trade agreements as well as a lack of technical expertise and internal government coordination. However, emerging economies have already accrued enough experience to be aware of the strengths and weaknesses of various IP schemes and their own ability to tailor IP to local needs. Developing countries will need to take advantage of that experience and defend innovative practices at international dispute resolution forums. Through creative, determined efforts, the developing countries can avoid other countries' IP excesses while establishing the kind of IP norms that address the real conditions of creativity and innovation in today's digitally empowered universe of scientific discourse.
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