Synopsis
This book gathers and builds on research into distinct national and regional traditions in regulating innovation. It is an early attempt at a comprehensive legal history of the uneven trans-Atlantic harmonization of IP law. Authors explore harmonization as a legal mandate and a progressive ideal, and imagine areas in which coherent regulatory webs could build a more vibrant trans-Atlantic knowledge economy.
About the Author
Péter Mezei, Ph.D. (2010), is Professor of Law at the University of Szeged, adjunct professor at the University of Turku, and chief researcher at the Vytautas Magnus University. He has regularly published on comparative, international, European and digital copyright law, including Copyright Exhaustion (2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, 2022).
Hannibal Travis, J.D. (1999), is Professor of Law at the Florida International University and Co-Director of the Intellectual Property Certificate Program. He has published numerous articles and book chapters on intellectual property and Internet law, including Copyright Class Struggle: Creative Economies in a Social Media Age (Cambridge University Press, 2018).
Anett Pogácsás, Ph.D. (2017), is Associate Professor at the Pázmány Péter Catholic University. She has worked extensively in the field of intellectual property law, and besides relevant articles and book chapters, she co-authored Intellectual Property: Hungary (Wolters Kluwer, 2023).
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