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Intellectual Property Law - LAWS8017 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Description This course is designed to give postgraduates a working understanding of intellectual property law, which is an important area of commercial legal practice and is vital to many industries. This course introduces students to the statutory provision and common law relating to Australian copyright, moral rights, passing off, trade marks, designs, patents, and confidential information. For each of the above, the course gives consideration to the subject matter that is protected, the preconditions for protection, and the nature of infringement. Other matters (such as remedies, competition law and international protection) may be dealt with briefly but are not examined in detail. As far as possible in an intensive overview, this course focuses on the commercial and business aspects of intellectual property.
LLM Specialisation Corporate and Commercial Law
Corporate, Commercial and Taxation Law Innovation Law Media and Technology Law Recommended Prior Knowledge Students are advised that to succeed in this coursethey should have a solid prior knowledge of the Australian Legal System and some principles of property law.
Course Objectives This course aims to introduce students to each of the general law and statutory protections outlined below. For each of the heads of protection, the course gives detailed consideration to the subject matter which is protected, the pre-conditions for protection, and the nature of infringement. Other matters such as remedies, licensing and international protection are dealt with briefly but cannot be examined in detail in a one semester course. Various justifications for these forms of property are also considered, particularly in the context of new or developing forms of intellectual property.
Main Topics
Assessment
Course Texts Recommended
While no textbook is prescribed, in 2012, S. Ricketson, M. Richardson and M Davison, Intellectual Property: Cases, Materials and Commentary (4th ed) (Sydney: LexisNexis Butterworths, 2009) is the recommended text. You are welcome to use an alternative textbook if you prefer.
Detailed handouts will also be distributed in class. Resources Refer to the Course Outline for a list of resources.
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