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IPR research regulations 'unconstitutional', says expert
Published in: Legalbrief Today
Date: Thu 23 April 2009
Category: General
Issue No: 2300



Draft Regulations on 'intellectual property rights from publicly financed research and development' - intended to be approved by the Minister of Science and Technology - have been published for comment.

However, Andrew Rens, Intellectual Property Fellow at the Shuttleworth Foundation in Cape Town, says in a blog on the Creative Commons blog site that the regulations 'are simply unworkable, intending to funnel the entire research output of SA through a convoluted series of bureaucratic filters'. Rens points out that almost all advanced scientific research in SA takes place through multinational consortia. These consortia enable scientists to share data and to contribute their skills to complex research. 'Taking part in international consortia is a minimum necessity for SA scientists,' he says. However, the regulations 'represent an attempt to squash multinational, multi-institutional research consortia into the form of agreements between a corporation and a research institution'. Rens says this is, in effect, a ban on participation in multinational research consortia, 'since research consortia have their own rules on how research may be used'. Says Rens: 'In other words, researchers may not choose to join the only, or best research consortium in the world, but must instead cede their academic freedom to bureaucrats, and not only to bureaucrats but bureaucrats impelled by the single objective of patenting whatever they can.' He says for this reason, the regulations are unconstitutional.
Full report on the Creative Commons blog site
Intellectual Property Rights from Publicly Financed Research and Development Regulations (PDF file)




  


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