Trade law Part 21

Trade law Part 21 in the United States

213
Protecting Cuisine Under the Rubric of Intellectual Property Law: Should the Law Play a Bigger Role in the Kitchen?
Emily Cunningham
Journal of High Technology Law
Volume 9, Number 1, 2009    p.21 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
Cunningham examines the state of intellectual property laws with respect to a restaurant’s recipes and cuisine. She discusses the emergence of avant-garde “techno-cooking” and increased calls for enhanced legal protections for culinary creations. Cunningham looks at the history and nature of the culinary industry in conjunction with the underlying purposes, policies, and rules of copyright, trademark, trade dress, and patent laws. Ultimately, Cunningham addresses the implications of expanding intellectual property laws too far into the culinary industry.

214
World Trade Law: Text, Materials and Commentary by Simon Lester, Bryan Mercurio, Arwel Davies, and Kara Leitner
Reviewed by Bashar Hikmet Malkawi
Web Journal of Current Legal Issues
Issue 2, April 2009 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

215
From Here to Beijing: Public/Private Overlaps in Trade and Their Effects on U.S. Law
Elizabeth Trujillo
Loyola University Chicago Law Journal
Volume 40, Number 3, Spring 2009    p.691 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

216
Should Common Law Doctrines Influence Our Approach to Restraint of Trade?
Mark Humphery von Jenner
eLaw Journal: Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law
Volume 15, Number 2, December 2008    p.275 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

217
Significant 2008 case law on the Community trade mark from the ECJ and the CFI
Arnaud Folliard-Monguiral and David Rogers
Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice
Volume 4, Number 5, May 2009    p.325-340 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

218
Trade Mark and Comparative Advertising Law
International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law
Volume 40, Number 1, 2009 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

219
The Role of the Office of the Administrative Law Judges Within the United States International Trade Commission
Hon. Carl C. Charneski
John Marshall Review of Intellectual Property Law
Volume 8, Issue 2, Winter 2009    p.216 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

220
English Trade Mark Law in the Eighteenth Century – the Fate of Thomas Hill
Norma Dawson
Journal of Legal History
Volume 30, Number 1, April 2009    p.71-79 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

221
Development in World Trade law
Priscilla Schwartz
Journal of International Commercial Law and Technology
Volume 4, Number 1, 2009    p.61-71 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

222
The Expressive Function of Trade Secret Law: Legality, Cost, Intrinsic Motivation, and Consensus
Yuval Feldman
Journal of Empirical Legal Studies
Volume 6, Issue 1, March 2009    p.177-212 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

223
The Solitary Attempt: International Trade Law and the Insulation of Domestic Greenhouse Gas Trading Schemes from Foreign Emissions Credit Markets
Elias Leake Quinn
University of Colorado Law Review
Volume 80, Number 1, Winter 2009    p.201 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

224
The future role of creditors’ schemes of arrangement in Australia after the rise of voluntary administrations
Rebecca Langley
Company and Securities Law Journal
Volume 27, Number 2, March 2009    p.70 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW
Since the introduction and emergence of the voluntary administration procedure in Pt 5.3A of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), creditors’ schemes are used rarely to deal with the affairs of a company in financial difficulty or to effect compromises with creditors. However, creditors’ schemes remain useful in particular circumstances largely due to the limitations of the voluntary administration regime, including the degree of financial difficulty in which a company must find itself before it can make use of the procedure and the unavailability of the provisions to foreign companies. This article explores the scope for the future use of creditors’ schemes in Australia in the aftermath of the development of the voluntary administration procedure by exploring the recent schemes considered by the courts. The cross-border recognition of creditors’ schemes is also contrasted to the cross-border recognition of the voluntary administration procedure and consideration is given as to whether the recent adoption of the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law’s Model Law on Cross-Border Insolvency is likely to be of some assistance in overcoming the limitations of the voluntary administration regime.

225
Keyword Advertising: Challenging the Traditional Concept of “Use” under Malaysian Trade Mark Law
Pek San Tay
Asian Journal of Comparative Law
Volume 4, Issue 1, January 2009 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

226
China, Regional Trade Agreements and WTO Law
Francis Snyder
Journal of World Trade
Volume 43, Number 1, February 2009    p.1 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW


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