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Indonesian Intellectual Property Law

Indonesian Intellectual Property Law Book Reviews INDONESIAN LAW INDONESIAN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW. By Carl-Bernd Kaehlig, (Gregory Churchill, ed.). Jakarta, Indonesia: Tatanusa Publishing Company, 1993. Pp. about 450. URHEBERRECHT UND GEWERBLICHER RECHTSSCHUTZ IN INDONESIEN [Copyright and Industrial Property in Indonesia]. By Christoph Antons, Ph.D. thesis at the University of Amsterdam , privately pub­ lished, 1995. Pp. 456. Reviewed by Christopher Heath* I. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN ASIA—TH E CONTEXT Thanks to the conclusion of th e GATT Agreement, including the section on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and the threat of unilatera l trade sanctions by the U.S., in­ tellectual property rights have figured prominently on the agenda of most Asian countries for the last couple of years. China, not yet a member of GATT but very eager to join, has enacted an impressive framework of intellectual property protection in th e last ten years. Proper enforcement of these rules in a country tha t ha s no track-record of protecting intellectual property ha s yet to follow. Taiwan, not a signatory to the GATT Agreement, either, has tried to comply with its rules nonetheless by enacting a new set of laws protecting intellectual property in the last five years. Both countries, Taiwa http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png American Journal of Comparative Law Oxford University Press

Indonesian Intellectual Property Law

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Publisher
Oxford University Press
Copyright
© 1996 by The American Society of Comparative Law, Inc.
ISSN
0002-919X
eISSN
2326-9197
DOI
10.2307/840626
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Book Reviews INDONESIAN LAW INDONESIAN INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY LAW. By Carl-Bernd Kaehlig, (Gregory Churchill, ed.). Jakarta, Indonesia: Tatanusa Publishing Company, 1993. Pp. about 450. URHEBERRECHT UND GEWERBLICHER RECHTSSCHUTZ IN INDONESIEN [Copyright and Industrial Property in Indonesia]. By Christoph Antons, Ph.D. thesis at the University of Amsterdam , privately pub­ lished, 1995. Pp. 456. Reviewed by Christopher Heath* I. INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN ASIA—TH E CONTEXT Thanks to the conclusion of th e GATT Agreement, including the section on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) and the threat of unilatera l trade sanctions by the U.S., in­ tellectual property rights have figured prominently on the agenda of most Asian countries for the last couple of years. China, not yet a member of GATT but very eager to join, has enacted an impressive framework of intellectual property protection in th e last ten years. Proper enforcement of these rules in a country tha t ha s no track-record of protecting intellectual property ha s yet to follow. Taiwan, not a signatory to the GATT Agreement, either, has tried to comply with its rules nonetheless by enacting a new set of laws protecting intellectual property in the last five years. Both countries, Taiwa

Journal

American Journal of Comparative LawOxford University Press

Published: Oct 1, 1996

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