Compulsory Licensing in Canada and Thailand: Comparing Regimes to Ensure Legitimate Use of the WTO Rules

Author:

Lybecker Kristina M.,Fowler Elisabeth

Abstract

The tension between economic policy and health policy is a longstanding dilemma, but one that was brought to the fore with the World Trade Organization’s (WTO) Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement in 1994. The pharmaceutical industry has long argued that intellectual property protection (IPP) is vital for innovation. At the same time, there are those who counter that strong IPP negatively impacts the affordability and availability of essential medicines in developing countries. However, actors on both sides of the debate were in agreement that something needed to be done to address the HIV/AIDS crisis, especially in developing countries. In response to sustained and significant pressure from civil society groups, members of the World Trade Organization agreed to the Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health (the Doha Declaration) in 2001. The Declaration clarified that countries unable to manufacture the needed pharmaceuticals could obtain more affordable generics elsewhere if necessary.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Health Policy,General Medicine,Issues, ethics and legal aspects

Reference83 articles.

1. Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Neither Expeditious, Nor a Solution: The WTO August 30th Decision Is Unworkable. An illustration through Canada’s Jean Chretien Pledge to Africa, report prepared for the XVI International AIDS Conference, Toronto, August 2006, available at (last visited April 7, 2009).

2. See Bate, supra 68, at 2.

3. 7. Royal Society Working Group on Intellectual Property, Keeping Science Open: The Effects of Intellectual Property Policy on the Conduct of Science, April 14, 2003, at 5, available at (last visited 14 July 2008).

4. 9. Id., at 8.

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