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IPRIA - Employees’ IP and the Employment Relationship – Incentives to Innovate

Free Seminar presented by IPRIA and CELRL in association with IP Australia

Date: Wednesday 23rd April 2008
Time: 6.00 pm; refreshments from 5.30pm
Venue: Davies Collison Cave, 1 Nicholson Street, Melbourne

Speakers: Colin Fenwick, Director, Centre for Employment & Labour Relations Law, Chris Dent, Senior Research Fellow, Intellectual Property Research Institute of Australia and Graeme Huon, Founder of audio acoustics technology and product development companies Whise, Precision Audio and TechstreamWhise

Chair: Victor Portelli, General Manager, Patents and Plant Breeders Rights Group, IP Australia

This seminar explores a number of issues that arise from the intersection of labour law, IP law and the need for incentives for innovation, from both theoretical and practical perspectives. Colin Fenwick will highlight the manner in which the law does, and does not provide incentives for workers to innovate. Chris Dent will introduce ideas that have been put forward as frameworks to better imagine the way in which the law can offer incentives for innovation. Graeme Huon will offer insights, based on his experience as an inventor and as a head of a firm focused on innovation, into the expectations of the legal process as a tool for encouraging workers, and their employers, to engage in the processes of invention and creativity.


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IPRIA Short Course - Mastering the Patent System Speaker Profiles

Andrew Christie is the founding Director of the Intellectual Property Research Institute of Australia (IPRIA), a national centre for multi-disciplinary research on the law, economics and management of intellectual property. IPRIA is based at the University of Melbourne, and is a joint enterprise of the
Faculty of Law, the Faculty of Economics and Commerce, and the Melbourne Business School.

Des Ryan is a consultant at Davies Collison Cave, a leading patent & trade mark attorney firm. His major areas of practice include advice and litigation in intellectual property law, technology
transfer agreements and licensing and advice and consultancy on intellectual property management, copyright, trade mark infringement, trade mark opposition and unfair competition.

Geoff Mansfield has extensive experience as a practicing patent and trademark attorney, with specialist expertise in the conduct of patent matters in Australia and in foreign jurisdictions. Geoff is the immediate past chairman of the national firm of Griffith Hack, and a specialist contributor to the Patents Commentary in the Butterworths publication Lahore: Patents, Trademark & Related Rights.


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Patent Attorney Privilege in Australia: Rationale, Current Concerns and Avenues for Reform

Elizabeth Hall, Dr Chris Dent and Professor Andrew Christie of Intellectual Property Research Institute of Australia have published a report on Patent Attorney Privilege in Australia: Rationale, Current Concerns and Avenues for Reform.

The Report investigates those concerns arising out of the limited scope of the patent attorney privilege in Australia (particularly its failure to apply to foreign patent attorneys). The Report also investigates whether the privilege’s scope should be extended to encompass communications with foreign patent practitioners and third parties generally.

The Report concludes that the privilege in Australia should be extended but that, to
most effectively address the concerns, action is also required at a transnational level.

Patent Attorney Privilege in Australia: Rationale, Current Concerns and Avenues for Reform


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