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Pedro de Miguel Asensio, Marketa Trimble, International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”): Recognition and Enforcement, 12 (2021) JIPITEC 74 para 1.
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%0 Journal Article %T International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”): Recognition and Enforcement %A Asensio, Pedro de Miguel %A Trimble, Marketa %J JIPITEC %D 2021 %V 12 %N 1 %@ 2190-3387 %F asensio2021 %X This section of the chapter “Recognition and Enforcement” of the International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”) establishes the conditions under which the effects of judgments rendered in a country may be extended to foreign jurisdictions. It seeks to favor international coordination and legal certainty by facilitating the cross-border recognition and enforcement of judgments relating to IP disputes. The Guidelines are based on a broad concept of judgment with restrictions concerning judgments not considered final under the law of the State of origin as well as certain provisional measures. The main provision of this section lays down the list of grounds on which a requested court must refuse to recognize and enforce a foreign judgment. %L 340 %U http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52518 %P 74-85Download
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@Article{asensio2021, author = "Asensio, Pedro de Miguel and Trimble, Marketa", title = "International Law Association's Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (``Kyoto Guidelines''): Recognition and Enforcement", journal = "JIPITEC", year = "2021", volume = "12", number = "1", pages = "74--85", abstract = "This section of the chapter ``Recognition and Enforcement'' of the International Law Association's Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (``Kyoto Guidelines'') establishes the conditions under which the effects of judgments rendered in a country may be extended to foreign jurisdictions. It seeks to favor international coordination and legal certainty by facilitating the cross-border recognition and enforcement of judgments relating to IP disputes. The Guidelines are based on a broad concept of judgment with restrictions concerning judgments not considered final under the law of the State of origin as well as certain provisional measures. The main provision of this section lays down the list of grounds on which a requested court must refuse to recognize and enforce a foreign judgment.", issn = "2190-3387", url = "http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52518" }Download
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TY - JOUR AU - Asensio, Pedro de Miguel AU - Trimble, Marketa PY - 2021 DA - 2021// TI - International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”): Recognition and Enforcement JO - JIPITEC SP - 74 EP - 85 VL - 12 IS - 1 AB - This section of the chapter “Recognition and Enforcement” of the International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”) establishes the conditions under which the effects of judgments rendered in a country may be extended to foreign jurisdictions. It seeks to favor international coordination and legal certainty by facilitating the cross-border recognition and enforcement of judgments relating to IP disputes. The Guidelines are based on a broad concept of judgment with restrictions concerning judgments not considered final under the law of the State of origin as well as certain provisional measures. The main provision of this section lays down the list of grounds on which a requested court must refuse to recognize and enforce a foreign judgment. SN - 2190-3387 UR - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52518 ID - asensio2021 ER -Download
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ISI
PT Journal AU Asensio, P Trimble, M TI International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”): Recognition and Enforcement SO JIPITEC PY 2021 BP 74 EP 85 VL 12 IS 1 AB This section of the chapter “Recognition and Enforcement” of the International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”) establishes the conditions under which the effects of judgments rendered in a country may be extended to foreign jurisdictions. It seeks to favor international coordination and legal certainty by facilitating the cross-border recognition and enforcement of judgments relating to IP disputes. The Guidelines are based on a broad concept of judgment with restrictions concerning judgments not considered final under the law of the State of origin as well as certain provisional measures. The main provision of this section lays down the list of grounds on which a requested court must refuse to recognize and enforce a foreign judgment. ERDownload
Mods
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Full Metadata
Bibliographic Citation | Journal of intellectual property, information technology and electronic commerce law 12 (2021) 1 |
---|---|
Title |
International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”): Recognition and Enforcement (eng) |
Author | Pedro de Miguel Asensio, Marketa Trimble |
Language | eng |
Abstract | This section of the chapter “Recognition and Enforcement” of the International Law Association’s Guidelines on Intellectual Property and Private International Law (“Kyoto Guidelines”) establishes the conditions under which the effects of judgments rendered in a country may be extended to foreign jurisdictions. It seeks to favor international coordination and legal certainty by facilitating the cross-border recognition and enforcement of judgments relating to IP disputes. The Guidelines are based on a broad concept of judgment with restrictions concerning judgments not considered final under the law of the State of origin as well as certain provisional measures. The main provision of this section lays down the list of grounds on which a requested court must refuse to recognize and enforce a foreign judgment. |
Subject | |
DDC | 340 |
Rights | DPPL |
URN: | urn:nbn:de:0009-29-52518 |