Sustainable Technology Transfer: A Guide to Global Aid & Trade Development
Book Details
Description
The essays are concerned with such issues and topics as the following:
- the major institutions and players in the formulation and enforcement of rules affecting technology transfer;
- the real-world value of legislative enactments in the area;
- a factual account of actual technology transfers;
- to what extent competition rules offer developing countries a way to escape the more severe consequences of undertakings they have accepted;
- the impact of compulsory licensing;
- the potential effect of the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement of 2010 (ACTA);
- and specific conditions pertaining to conservation of biodiversity, climate change and energy.
Included are thorough analyses of the obligations and flexibilities expressed in numerous international conventions--including the TRIPS Agreement, the Convention on Biological Diversity, and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change--as well as how these obligations and flexibilities function in practice.
The book concludes with a view from a developing country perspective and forward looking statements issuing from a heightened awareness of the role that technology transfer might play, if properly deployed, in the development of the disadvantaged countries of the world. Although few will argue with the Millennium Development Declaration's affirmation that those who benefit least deserve help from those who benefit most, disagreement continues over crucial details such as how technology transfer should take place and the role of the law in facilitating it. This book goes a long way toward removing persistent obstacles that block the goal of closing the technology gap, and as such it will be welcomed and studied by interested parties worldwide.
