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Mohammed K. El Said 《Liverpool Law Review》2007,28(1):143-174
The advocation of stronger and higher levels of Intellectual Property Rights (IPRs) protection has been on the rise in recent
years, particularly since the establishment of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) in 1995. Although its establishment signalled
the beginning of a new phase in the protection of IPRs internationally, no more than a decade later, it is seen that such
a regime is still undergoing a number of significant changes. In this regard, the rise of bilateralism and the retreat of
multilateralism resulted in the so-called ‹TRIPS-Plus’ recipe in which developing countries are increasingly giving way to
the demands of the industrialised countries through incorporating higher levels of IPRs protection domestically. Although
the USA has often been viewed as the primary advocator and enforcer of the TRIPS-Plus recipe globally, this article shows
that in fact the European Union (EU) advocated the TRIPS-Plus recipe long before the USA. Thus, this article discusses the
case of the European TRIPS-Plus model with the Arab World as a clear demonstration of such a trend. Developing and Arab countries
are now faced with two determined superpowers acting at both the unilateral and bilateral levels to achieve their desired
higher standards of IPRs protection worldwide. This will further erode the flexibilities of the TRIPS Agreement, and will
entail grave repercussions for both the developing and Arab countries.
LLM, PhD, Lecturer in Law, University of Central Lancashire (UCLAN), UK. The author may be contacted at mel-said@uclan.ac.uk 相似文献