Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28020
Title: On the European Commission’s proposal to create a new EU-wide compulsory licensing regime.
Authors: Gurgula, O
Keywords: compulsory licensing;the European Commission’s proposal;access to medicines;emergency;crisis;EU;patents;access to confidential information;trade secrets;pharmaceutical industry
Issue Date: 1-Feb-2024
Publisher: Sweet & Maxwell/ESC Publishing
Citation: Gurgula, O. (2024) 'On the European Commission’s proposal to create a new EU-wide compulsory licensing regime.', European Intellectual Property Review, 46 (2), pp. 70 - 77. Available at: https://uk.westlaw.com/Document/I15AE6E30B59D11EE8CAAD3B343E66021/View/FullText.html (accessed: 5 February 2024).
Abstract: This article discusses the European Commission’s proposal to implement a new EU-wide compulsory licensing regime and its key elements. The Commission’s proposal contains some novel and useful elements that may improve the effectiveness of compulsory licensing at the EU. This includes the possibility to issue a compulsory licence in relation to patent applications and SPCs, the indication of a generic name of a compulsory licensed medicine where the identification of all intellectual property rights or rights-holders requires time, the suspension of regulatory data and market protection, as well as access to confidential information and know-how. Moreover, while the proposal is focused on the use of compulsory licensing at the pan-European level, the approach taken by the Commission may also serve as an example for national compulsory licensing regimes in European and non-European countries making their mechanisms more flexible and effective. Such an approach may help to make the EU (and potentially other jurisdictions) better prepared for future national and global emergencies.
URI: https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/28020
ISSN: 0142-0461
Appears in Collections:Brunel Law School Embargoed Research Papers

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