OTTAWA — The world’s intellectual property system is broken. It’s stopping lifesaving technologies from reaching the people who need them most in developed and developing countries, according to the authors of a report released in Ottawa today by an international coalition of experts. ‘We found the same stumbling blocks in the traditional communities of Brazil as we did in the boardroom of a corporation that holds the patent to a gene that can determine the chance a woman will develop breast cancer,’ said Richard Gold, professor of intellectual property at McGill University and chair of the International Expert Group that produced the report. ‘Most striking is that no matter where we looked, the lack of trust played a vital role in blocking negotiations that could have benefited both sides, as well as the larger public.’ The report is the result of seven years of work by Gold and his colleagues, experts in law, ethics and economics Gold said that the authors based their report on revelations that came out of discussions with policy-makers, industry representatives, scientists and academics from around the world, as well as the outcomes of a series of case studies involving Brazil, Canada, Kenya the […]
Friday, September 12th, 2008
Landmark Study Reports Breakdown in Biotech Patent System
Author: COIMBRA SIRICA and CAROL LIN VIEIRA
Source: Burness Communications
Publication Date: 9-Sep-08
Link: Landmark Study Reports Breakdown in Biotech Patent System
Source: Burness Communications
Publication Date: 9-Sep-08
Link: Landmark Study Reports Breakdown in Biotech Patent System
Stephan: This is why we need competent people in regulatory, technical, and trade agencies, not the political ideological hacks that have been used to gut these agencies in the past eight years.