Buch, Englisch, 664 Seiten
How the Expansion of Trademark Protection Is Stifling Cultural Creativity
Buch, Englisch, 664 Seiten
ISBN: 978-94-035-2370-5
Verlag: Kluwer Law International
- problems arising from the registration of cultural icons for use on souvenir and merchandising articles;
- lack of sufficient safeguards in trademark law against cultural heritage branding;
- current scope of trademark rights, including the protection of brand value and communication functions, and the deterrent effect of trademark protection on cultural creativity;
- possibility of a categorical exclusion of contemporary cultural icons and cultural heritage material from trademark protection;
- development of a strict gatekeeper requirement of ‘use as a mark’ to prevent unjustified trademark infringement claims;
- development of robust, culturally based defences against trademark infringement claims; and
- general guidelines for the regulation of protection overlaps in intellectual property law, based on insights derived from the analysis of copyright/trademark overlaps.
Drawing on aesthetic, sociological and economic theories that support initiatives to safeguard the autonomy of the literary and artistic domain and support remix activities of artists, the author suggests sound criteria for identifying signs with cultural significance that should be excluded from trademark registration. The book shows how intellectual property law can make rights cumulation strategies less attractive and avoid the loss of inner consistency and social legitimacy, easing the tension between indefinitely renewable trademark rights and the need to preserve and cultivate the public domain of cultural expressions and other intellectual creations that enjoy protection for a limited period of time, such as industrial designs and technical know-how. Its assessment criteria will assist and enable trademark examiners and judges to identify relevant cultural signs, and its proposals for regulatory responses to protection overlaps in intellectual property law will prove of great and lasting value to lawyers, policymakers, and scholars dealing with intellectual property law.