The past half century in Uganda has witnessed both concern and interest in copyright and neighbouring rights. This is evident in the laws and treaties initiated by both the Uganda Government and the international community, aimed at enabling copyright holders to realize the benefi ts of their intellectual works.
Intellectual Property Law in East Africa
KShs 3,217.00
The past half century in Uganda has witnessed both concern and interest in copyright and neighbouring rights. This is evident in the laws and treaties initiated by both the Uganda Government and the international community, aimed at enabling copyright holders to realize the benefi ts of their intellectual works.
2 in stock
Related products
-
Litigation-The Art of Strategy and Practice
Litigation – The Art of Strategy and Practice is a practical guide for lawyers and law students, offering insights on case strategy, courtroom skills, and effective advocacy.
The book is not meant to be the final solution to all practical legal problems but rather seeks to provide a quick reference to the common topical issues the litigator faces in court.
-
Equity and Trusts-DAVID BAKIBINGA
The book provides an overview of equitable principles in Uganda and links this with the maxims of equity and the distinction between equitable and legal interests. The book will benefit students offering Equity and Trusts
and Estate Planning in East African universities as well as legal
practitioners, insurance, social security and corporate operators. -
Introduction to Tax Law Revised Edition
The rules of trade can be sophisticated and misunderstood by business people. In this book the author concisely explains the history of tax, how VAT is calculated with the aid of examples, the functions and the role of Kenya Revenue Authority, different trade treaties agreements, terms and documentation.
-
Handbook of Company Law
This handbook covers the wider subject of business law which includes international elements of commercial law and the law of business associations. It covers a few of the topics which commonly feature in accountancy and business management courses in commercial and company law, and in curricular designed for undergraduate students of law.
-
Accounting for Lawyers
This book recognizes the fear faced by many law students and to a great extent the practicing lawyer concerning accounting and seeks to provide a basic and simplifi ed understanding to accounting principles for those who have no previous accounting background while at the same time introducing some advanced topics for students with previous exposure and thus a deeper scope of accounting principles. The book also sought to incorporate key accounting principles and relevant changes and developments in the Kenyan industry. A comprehensive glossary of terms has been provided to assist learners in grasping key meanings and explanations
-
Law of Succession-W.M MUSYOKA
This text broadly and comprehensively covers the area of law of succession in Kenya. It exposes the substantive succession legal regime applying in Kenya as well as the Kenyan probate practice.
-
International Intellectual Property in an Integrated World Economy (Aspen Casebook)
International Intellectual Property in an Integrated World Economy, Fourth Edition by Frederick M. Abbott, Thomas Cottier, and Francis Gurry, provides a comprehensive treatment of the international intellectual property system across the spectrum of intellectual property rights and interests. It introduces the institutional architecture at the multilateral, regional/plurilateral, bilateral and national levels. For each form of IP, it addresses the technical legal rules and illustrative jurisprudence, as well as economic and social welfare implications. Each of the authors has played a role in the development and implementation of the international rules, and they bring their experience to bear in introducing students to the field.
New to the Fourth Edition:
- The latest developments in bilateral and regional agreements regulating intellectual property, including NAFTA 2.0 (USMCA), CPTPP, and CETA
- Important new judicial decisions, including the U.S. Supreme Court decision adopting international exhaustion of patents and CJEU decisions addressing trademarks, geographical indications, and copyright
- Developments in IP and human rights; IP and competition law; and IP and health
- The WTO panel report in the Australia-Tobacco case
Professors and students will benefit from:
- An approach to the international IP system that situates the rules within the broader context of international law and the public policy objectives that governments, industry, and interest groups are seeking to achieve
- Case law from international dispute settlement bodies, as well as from national and regional courts
- Discussion of patent, trademark, geographical indication, copyright, design, trade secret, and data protection; as well as plant variety protection, protection of genetic resources and traditional knowledge, and the role of open source
- An explanation of the new European Union Unitary Patent system
- Exploration of the increasingly important role of emerging market IP systems
- Materials to help students understand the disputes between the United States and China involving IP, investment, and transfer of technology
- Inclusion of important jurisprudential developments
-
THE NEW CONSTITUTIONAL LAW OF KENYA: PRINCIPLES, GOVERNMENT AND HUMAN RIGHTS
On 27 August 2010, a new Constitution for Kenya was promulgated. The Constitution seeks to re-orient the country by establishing a robust dispensation for good democratic governance amenable to the exercise of human rights. This book is tailored to unveil to the reader the fundamental normative and institutional frameworks of Kenya’s new Constitution. Not only does it define key concepts in constitutional law, generally, it also details how government in Kenya has been restructured and re-organised to give effect to the traditional principles that form the basis of constitutional law.
The golden thread that cuts across the various chapters of the book is the emphasis that good constitutions anchor certain tenets that have garnered recognition as hallmarks of democratic dispensation.These hallmarks include the concept of separation of powers; the doctrine of the rule of law; constitutionalism and human rights. These attributes have largely been secured by the 2010 Constitution. Thus, this book is expected to contribute to this new promise by making knowledge on the Constitution accessible through breaking down and contextualising its provisions. It is certain to be useful to law and government students, lawyers, researchers and other persons who seek to understand the new constitutional order. Morris Kiwinda Mbondenyi, LL.D., LL.M. (UNISA), LL.B. (Moi), Senior Lecturer and Head of Department, African Nazarene University. J Osogo Ambani, LL.D. (Cand), LL.M. (UP), LL.B. (UoN), Lecturer, MoiUniversity School of Law.
Be the first to review “Intellectual Property Law in East Africa”