UN Special Rapporteur Presents Report on the Impact of Patent Law
on the Right to Science and Culture
Posted by REPOST on October 26, 2015
http://infojustice.org/archives/35216
Farida Shaheed, United Nations Special Rapporteur in the field of
cultural rights, presented her report on patents and access to
culture to the General Assembly. The report’s summary is below, and
the full report is available here.
Summary: In the report, the Special Rapporteur addresses the
implications of patent policy for the human right to science and
culture. She reaffirms the distinction to be made between
intellectual property rights and human rights, emphasizing that the
right to the protection of the moral and material interests of
authors does not necessarily coincide with the prevailing approach
to intellectual property law. There is no human right to patent
protection. The right to protection of moral and material interests
cannot be used to defend patent laws that inadequately respect the
right to participate in cultural life, to enjoy the benefits of
scientific progress and its applications, to scientific freedoms and
he right to food and health and the rights of indigenous peoples and
local communities.
Patents, when properly structured, may expand the options and
well-being of all people by making new possibilities available. Yet,
they also give patent-holders the power to deny access to others,
thereby limiting or denying the public’s right of participation to
science and culture. The human rights perspective demands that
patents do not extend so far as to interfere with individuals’
dignity and well-being. Where patent rights and human rights are in
conflict, human rights must prevail.
Whereas from the perspective of trade law, exclusions, exceptions
and flexibilities under international intellectual property law,
such as the World Trade Organization Agreement on Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights, remain optional, from the
perspective of human rights, they are often to be considered as
obligations.
Click here for the full report.