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Patents and Innovation in Mainland China and Hong Kong
Two Systems in One Country Compared

The first book on how patents and innovation interact within the two co-existing patent systems in mainland China and Hong Kong.

Yahong Li (Edited by)

9781107194649, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 12 October 2017

286 pages, 2 b/w illus. 2 tables
23.5 x 15.7 x 1.8 cm, 0.57 kg

'With uncertainties about the Unified Patent Court and system in Europe and the disruptions of long-standing expectations by the Supreme Court in the United States, China promises to emerge as the primary place where researchers and investors can vindicate their faith in the future of intellectual property. In that new emerging world of IP, knowledge of Chinese IP law and practice will be at a premium. Chinese IP has an additional point of attraction: it is actually two systems - one on the mainland and one in the traditional Asian economic powerhouse of Hong Kong. This book by Professor Li opens the door to both systems and increases insight into both by comparison. As China continues to emerge as the center pole holding up the tent of IP, Professor Li's book will teach ways to use that tent and its center pole to protect the world's IP assets.' Judge Randall Rader, Principal, The Rader Group; former Chief Judge, US Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit

How do patents affect innovation in mainland China and Hong Kong? How can two patent systems operate within one country and how is innovation affected by the 'one country two systems' model? For the first time, this book links these challenging issues together and provides a comprehensive overview for government officials, law-makers, academics, law practitioners and students to understand the patent systems of mainland China and Hong Kong. Themes examined include the interaction between the two distinctive patent regimes, the impact of patents on innovation in China's specific industries such as green tech, traditional Chinese medicines and telecommunications, the role of utility models in inflating low-quality patents and the application of good faith principle in enforcing FRAND in mainland China, patent system reforms in Hong Kong, and the impact of these changes on innovation in the two vastly distinctive yet closely connected jurisdictions.

Introduction. Patents, innovation, and 'one country two patent systems' Yahong Li
Part I. The Role of Patents in China's Industrial Innovation: 1. Utility model patent regimes and innovation in China and beyond Dan Prud'homme
2. Greening patent system to incentivize green technology innovation in China Li Gao
3. Traditional Chinese medicines and patent law: incompatibility and remedies Yifu Chen
4. Industry-specific study of patent law and innovation in China's telecommunications industry Limeng Yu
5. The legal framework for FRAND enforcement in China Jyh-An Lee
Part II. Reform of Patent System and Innovation in Hong Kong: 6. The role of patent in the economic development in Hong Kong Frank Charn Wing Wan
7. An overview of the development of Hong Kong's patent system Leslie Shay
8. Debates on the role of the original grant patent system in Hong Kong's innovation Jeffrey Mclean and Winnie Yue
9. Patent law reform in Hong Kong: lessons from Singapore Ronald Yu.

Subject Areas: International business [KJK], Business innovation [KJD], Business studies: general [KJB], Business & management [KJ], Economics [KC]

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