Landmarks in Australian Intellectual Property Law

Book launch for Landmarks in Australian Intellectual Property Law
Edited by: Andrew T Kenyon, Megan Richardson and Sam Ricketson, Cambridge University Press, 2009

Wednesday 25 March 2009, 5.30pm for 6.00-7.00pm
Mallesons Stephen Jaques
Level 50, Bourke Place,
600 Bourke Street,
Melbourne VIC 3000

Please join us to celebrate the publication of this new book published by Cambridge University Press and edited by Professors Andrew Kenyon, Megan Richardson and Sam Ricketson of the Melbourne Law School, when it is launched by Dr Emmerson QC. This authoritative text provides a picture of how Australian intellectual property law has developed as a distinctly Australian body of law during the century since Federation – taking a selection of key intellectual property law cases, situating them in their social contexts, and telling their stories as well as providing factual details about the arguments and evidence. Landmarks in Australian Intellectual Property Law is a valuable resource for academics, researchers, practitioners and judges in Australia and throughout the common law world. Authors and chapters are as follows:

Richard Garnett, ‘Potter v Broken Hill: misuse of precedent in cross-border IP litigation’
Sam Ricketson, ‘The Union Label case: an early Australian IP story’
Peter Heerey and Nicole Malone, ‘RPM for RPM: National Phonographic Company of Australia v Menck’
Jill McKeough, ‘Horses and the Law: the enduring legacy of Victoria Park Racing’
Stephen Hubicki and Brad Sherman, ‘We have never been modern: the High Court’s decision in National Research Development Corporation v Commissioner of Patents’
Sam Ricketson and David Catterns, ‘Of vice-chancellors and authors: UNSW v Moorhouse’
Christoph Antons, ‘Foster v Mountford: cultural confidentiality in a changing Australia’
Mark Davison, ‘Cadbury Schweppes v Pub Squash: what is all the fizz about?’
Janice Luck, ‘The Firmagroup case: trigger for designs law reform’
Megan Richardson, ‘Larger than life in the Australian cinema: Pacific Dunlop v Hogan‘
Elizabeth Adeney, ‘O Fortuna! On the vagaries of litigation and the story of musical debasement in Australia’
Colin Golvin, ‘The protection of At the Waterhole by John Bulun Bulun: Aboriginal art and the recognition of private and communal rights’
Matthew Rimmer, ‘The grapes of wrath: the Coonawarra dispute, geographical indications and international trade’
Leanne Wiseman and Matthew Hall, ‘Waiting for the “Billy”® to boil: the Waltzing Matilda case’

Please RSVP to Charlotte Morgans at law-cmcl@unimelb.edu.au by Monday, 23rd March 2009