Now also available as
eBook
Geographical indications (GIs) for food—and other names that connote a
characteristic or process together with origin—fit in with notions of quality,
tradition, and support for local producers that are important for the
producers, for an increasing number of consumers, and for local development.
Although there are many costs and administrative commitments associated with
the use of these names, they can fill a growing consumer demand and a
community need, and many localities and nations are turning toward them.
However, in attempting to prevent the use of ‘culture’ for protectionist
purposes, the World Trade Organization (WTO) treats geographical indications,
like trademarks, as private rights. This affirmation—which runs counter to the
traditional view that a GI is a communal right—lies at the root of a legal
stand-off at the WTO between two groups of countries.
Focusing primarily on the Reports of the Panels in the WTO disputes brought by
Australia and the United States against the European Communities, this
important book explores the meaning of the TRIPS Article 22 and Article 24
commitments, especially as they concern the definition of the term
‘geographical indication’ and national and most favored nation treatment. The
author clarifies the relationship between niche-market geographical
indications and the more prevalent (and commercially valuable) trademarks.
With no sacrifice of depth, she covers a wide range of issues such as the
following:
• estimates of the value added by origin and tradition;
• procedures followed by the European Communities;
• minimum standards of protection under TRIPS;
• the significance of the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade;
• administrative and procedural rules at WTO and national levels;
• the Codex Alimentarius and WTO Agreements;
• the role of the TRIPS Council; and
• proposals for the Doha Development Agenda.
As a detailed analysis and interpretation of the Article 22 definition as it
exists within the context of an agreement on private property and the WTO
market access goals, this book is of crucial importance to an adequate
understanding of the trade rules that apply to the recognition, protection and
enforcement of geographical indications and competing names. It is sure to be
of great value to anyone concerned with this specialized field, whether
practitioners, jurists, officials, policymakers, or academics.
Contents:
1. Introduction. 2. Food Labelling for Origin and Tradition.
3. Indications of Origin Prior to the TRIPS Agreement. 4.
Geographical Indications for Food Products under the TRIPS Agreement and Other
Recent Agreements. 5. Geographical Indications under National Law. 6.
Making a Geographical Indications System Work: Administration and Financing.
7. Competing Institutional Perspectives: Debating International Standards
for Parmesan and Other Cheeses. 8. The Geographical Indications Dispute
at the World Trade Organization. 9. The Council for Trade-Related
Intellectual Property. 10. Geographical Indications for Food Products
and the Doha Development Agenda. 11. Conclusions.