Intellectual
Property (IP) is a set of economic and moral rights (IPRs) concerning
intangible creations of the human intellect. It includes patents on inventions,
copyright on artistic work, such as music and literature (but also software),
trademarks on goods and services, trade secrets on product formulas on
production processes, as well as more specific rights attached to traditional
knowledge (mostly in the form of geographical indications) or plant varieties (rights
for breeders and farmers).
IPRs are nowadays a major economic resource for a variety of
organizations, ranging from pharmaceutical and hi-tech multinationals engaged
in global trade, agricultural consortia resisting the commodification of their
products, media companies selling their contents through the internet, and
software companies licensing their applications for computers, mobiles and
connected objects.
The course will provide students with a basic understanding of
the economic and legal principles underlying IP legislation and enforcement (not
just through theory, but also history) and to introduce them to the debate on
the global extension of both. Both descriptive
statistics and case studies will be used to stress the relevance of the topic,
which may otherwise sound too technical for some students.
- Enseignant: LissoniFrancesco
- Enseignant: SterziValerio