Postgraduate Course: Intellectual Property Law, Innovation and Creativity (LAWS11370)
Course Outline
School | School of Law |
College | College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences |
Credit level (Normal year taken) | SCQF Level 11 (Postgraduate) |
Availability | Not available to visiting students |
SCQF Credits | 20 |
ECTS Credits | 10 |
Summary | Intellectual Property laws are often associated with the aims of promoting 'innovation' and 'creativity'. But how do Intellectual Property laws actually impact upon innovation and creativity? Do they promote or hinder them? What is the relationship between Intellectual Property Laws and the variety of activities that they are designed to affect in everyday life? Are there gaps between what Intellectual Property laws aim to achieve and what they actually achieve? Why do these gaps exist and how can they be filled? How should Intellectual Property policy be formulated? This course explores these questions by examining a selection of recent empirical legal research that has investigated the role and impact of IP rights in the 'real world'. |
Course description |
This is an advanced course in Intellectual Property rights that provides students with an inter-disciplinary perspective on Intellectual property. In terms of theme, the course's focus is on the relationship between Intellectual Property laws and innovation and creativity. In terms of substance, the course centres on several empirical studies that will enable students to gain an awareness of the perceptions and implications of IP law in the real world in relation to the theme of innovation and creativity. These studies will provide students insights into the application and role of IP rights (copyright, patents, and trade marks) for various stakeholders, i.e. creators and inventors, rights owners, users, the general public and the public interest. They will offer fresh, challenging, and surprising, accounts of how IP is understood, used, abused, valued, feared, resisted, or ignored in everyday experiences. Students will learn to read, understand, de-construct, and critically evaluate empirical studies on the relationship between IP rights, innovation and creativity. They will also learn to assimilate themes emerging from across such studies to develop their own views and evaluation of whether, and if so how, IP promotes or hinders innovation and creativity. The course complement and adds to the legal knowledge that students may have from other masters courses on legal and international aspects of IP law (or have acquired from previous knowledge, studies, or experience of IP law) by providing them with an additional empirical 'real-world lens' on the role and value of IP rights. This knowledge and perspective can be quite valuable to future career pathways in practice, policy-making, or academia.
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Entry Requirements (not applicable to Visiting Students)
Pre-requisites |
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Co-requisites | |
Prohibited Combinations | |
Other requirements | To enrol in this course students must have prior knowledge of the core elements of Intellectual Property Law meaning that students must have a basic understanding of the main Intellectual Property rights (i.e. copyright, patents, trade marks, and design rights) . This knowledge can be demonstrated through any prior studies undertaken, or training or experience gained, in the student's own, or another jurisdiction. This course is not suitable for those who have no previous knowledge of Intellectual Property rights. |
Course Delivery Information
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Academic year 2024/25, Not available to visiting students (SS1)
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Quota: 30 |
Course Start |
Semester 1 |
Timetable |
Timetable |
Learning and Teaching activities (Further Info) |
Total Hours:
200
(
Seminar/Tutorial Hours 20,
Programme Level Learning and Teaching Hours 4,
Directed Learning and Independent Learning Hours
176 )
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Assessment (Further Info) |
Written Exam
0 %,
Coursework
100 %,
Practical Exam
0 %
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Additional Information (Assessment) |
This course will be assessed by the following component(s):
1) A short assignment due during the teaching term. This may take the form of a short essay; a poster; a response to a policy consultation; or other form of assessment designed to meet topical subjects arising during the currency of the course. The assignment will be no more than 2,000 words and, will be worth 20% of the final mark.
2) Students will be able to choose between the following two end of term 80% assessment options:
a) a written essay of 4,000 words at the end of term worth 80% of the final mark
b) a written report of 4,000 words (undertaken in a team of two students) and an oral presentation of the report undertaken at the end of the term worth 80% of the final mark. The written report and presentation will each be worth 50% of the total mark. |
Feedback |
Each course will provide the opportunity for at least one piece of formative assessment with associated feedback. This will be provided within an appropriate timescale to enable students to learn from this prior to the summative assessment.
There will be two formative feedback opportunities for this course. Student presentations during the course and a group exercise towards the end of the course.
Feedback on the formative assessment may be provided in various formats, for example, to include written, oral, video, face-to-face, whole class, or individual. The course organiser will decide which format is most appropriate in relation to the nature of the assessment.
Feedback on both formative and summative in-course assessed work will be provided in time to be of use in subsequent assessments within the course.
Feedback on the summative assessment will be provided in written form via Learn, the University of Edinburgh's Virtual Learning Environment (VLE). |
No Exam Information |
Learning Outcomes
On completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- An awareness of the role and importance of the law and society perspective for IP law in addition to the doctrinal approach, in understanding many key questions and concepts.
- An appreciation of how such perspectives contribute to an evaluation of IP policy and practice.
- A deeper understanding of the concepts and normative questions permeating IP law.
- A practical understanding of policy questions in IP law through carrying out a piece of non-legal research and setting it appropriately within its legal context.
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Reading List
Please note that there is no one text or textbook which covers the subject matter of the course and reading on the course will include a range of books, book chapters, and journal articles available through the University library, as well as online materials including governmental and institutional reports, journals, blogs, and news items.
Some examples of the type of reading covered in the course is indicated below:
Academic empirical scholarship analysing a range of primary and secondary data on the role of IP e.g.
S Kheria, Copyright in the Everyday Practice of Writers in J Jefferies and S Kember (eds), Whose Book is it anyway? A View from elsewhere on Publishing, Copyright and Creativity (Open Book Publishers, 2019), pp. 141-180;
T Sichelman and SJH Graham, 'Patenting by Entrepreneurs: An Empirical Study' [2010] 17 Michigan Telecommunications and Technology Law Review 111;
E Fauchart and E Von Hippel, 'Norms-based Intellectual Property Systems: the case of French Chefs' [2008] 19(2) Organization Science 187
Academic and policy reviews which evaluate a range of IP evidence or empirical scholarship on the role of IP e.g.
K Raustiala and CJ Sprigman, 'When are IP rights necessary? Evidence from innovation in IP's negative space' (Chapter 11) in B Depoorter and PS Menell (eds) Research handbook on the economics of intellectual property law, Vol.1 (Edward Elgar, 2019) pp. 309 -329
L Orsenigo & V Sterzi,'Comparative Study of the Use of Patents in Different Industries' [2010] 33 Knowledge, Internationalization and Technology Studies (KITeS).
Reports by institutions, industry bodies, and governments on the role of IP e.g. WIPO, 'World Intellectual Property Report 2015: Breakthrough Innovation and Economic Growth' (2015)
Detailed reading lists for each seminar will be made available during the course.
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Additional Information
Graduate Attributes and Skills |
(a) communication skills, oral and written
(b) intellectual skills in identifying a non-legal approach to address a legal problem, the ability to gather and engage
with non-legal materials, organise, evaluate and present them
with relevant arguments
(c) Managing time and taking responsibility for their work
(d) team work skills |
Keywords | Intellectual Property Law,Law and Society,Socio-legal studies |
Contacts
Course organiser | Dr Smita Kheria
Tel:
Email: smita.kheria@ed.ac.uk |
Course secretary | Miss Hannah Ackroyd
Tel: (0131 6)50 2008
Email: hackroyd@ed.ac.uk |
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