{"title":"非洲地理标志的法律建构","authors":"Titilayo Adebola","doi":"10.1111/jwip.12255","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>This paper discusses how African organisations and countries construct their geographical indication (GI) systems. It makes three primary arguments. First, that the nascent GI agenda in Africa is driven by the European Union (EU) to principally promote European interests. Nonetheless, African countries can benefit from GI regimes by crafting laws that promote African interests. Second, that simply embracing the introduction of GI laws will not result in the EU's promised socioeconomic development in Africa. This is because multifarious factors including infrastructure, investment, branding, marketing and security are required to realise successful GI regimes. Third, that African countries must leverage contextually customised GI regimes to maximise the potentials they present. Contextually customised GI regimes can engender socioeconomic development. Beyond the EU's agenda-setting technologies, international affiliations and treaty boundaries shape GI laws in Africa, which inform the marked variation in its GI systems. This variation reflects the dissonance in international treaties for GIs. While African countries align with demandeurs that espouse stronger GIs laws at the international level, the only regional instrument on GIs in Africa is its Continental Strategy for GIs. In examining examples from the Organisation Africaine de la Propriété Intellectuelle, the African Regional Intellectual Property Organisation, South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria, this timely paper maintains that although GIs present promises of socioeconomic development, policymakers, lawmakers and relevant African stakeholders must caution against their often-overlooked pitfalls. As ultimately, it is the responsibility of Africans, not foreigners, to guarantee the generation of thriving GI ecosystems for African products.</p>","PeriodicalId":54129,"journal":{"name":"Journal of World Intellectual Property","volume":"26 1","pages":"3-29"},"PeriodicalIF":0.7000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/jwip.12255","citationCount":"1","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"The legal construction of geographical indications in Africa\",\"authors\":\"Titilayo Adebola\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/jwip.12255\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>This paper discusses how African organisations and countries construct their geographical indication (GI) systems. It makes three primary arguments. First, that the nascent GI agenda in Africa is driven by the European Union (EU) to principally promote European interests. Nonetheless, African countries can benefit from GI regimes by crafting laws that promote African interests. Second, that simply embracing the introduction of GI laws will not result in the EU's promised socioeconomic development in Africa. This is because multifarious factors including infrastructure, investment, branding, marketing and security are required to realise successful GI regimes. Third, that African countries must leverage contextually customised GI regimes to maximise the potentials they present. Contextually customised GI regimes can engender socioeconomic development. Beyond the EU's agenda-setting technologies, international affiliations and treaty boundaries shape GI laws in Africa, which inform the marked variation in its GI systems. This variation reflects the dissonance in international treaties for GIs. 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引用次数: 1
摘要
本文讨论了非洲组织和国家如何构建其地理标志系统。它提出了三个主要论点。首先,非洲新生的GI议程是由欧盟(EU)推动的,主要是为了促进欧洲的利益。尽管如此,非洲国家可以通过制定促进非洲利益的法律,从GI制度中受益。其次,仅仅接受GI法律的引入不会导致欧盟承诺的非洲社会经济发展。这是因为实现成功的GI制度需要多种因素,包括基础设施、投资、品牌、营销和安全。第三,非洲国家必须利用情境定制的GI制度,最大限度地发挥其潜力。情境定制的GI制度可以促进社会经济发展。除了欧盟制定议程的技术之外,国际关系和条约边界形成了非洲的GI法律,这些法律为其GI系统的显著变化提供了信息。这种变化反映了全球信息系统国际条约中的不和谐。虽然非洲国家与在国际层面支持更强有力的全球信息系统法律的需求方保持一致,但非洲唯一关于全球信息系统的区域文书是其全球信息系统大陆战略。在研究非洲知识产权组织(Organisation Africaine de la PropriétéIntellectuelle)、非洲区域知识产权组织、南非、肯尼亚和尼日利亚的例子时,这篇及时的论文认为,尽管全球信息系统承诺实现社会经济发展,但政策制定者、立法者和相关非洲利益攸关方必须警惕它们经常被忽视的陷阱。归根结底,保证为非洲产品创造繁荣的GI生态系统是非洲人的责任,而不是外国人的责任。
The legal construction of geographical indications in Africa
This paper discusses how African organisations and countries construct their geographical indication (GI) systems. It makes three primary arguments. First, that the nascent GI agenda in Africa is driven by the European Union (EU) to principally promote European interests. Nonetheless, African countries can benefit from GI regimes by crafting laws that promote African interests. Second, that simply embracing the introduction of GI laws will not result in the EU's promised socioeconomic development in Africa. This is because multifarious factors including infrastructure, investment, branding, marketing and security are required to realise successful GI regimes. Third, that African countries must leverage contextually customised GI regimes to maximise the potentials they present. Contextually customised GI regimes can engender socioeconomic development. Beyond the EU's agenda-setting technologies, international affiliations and treaty boundaries shape GI laws in Africa, which inform the marked variation in its GI systems. This variation reflects the dissonance in international treaties for GIs. While African countries align with demandeurs that espouse stronger GIs laws at the international level, the only regional instrument on GIs in Africa is its Continental Strategy for GIs. In examining examples from the Organisation Africaine de la Propriété Intellectuelle, the African Regional Intellectual Property Organisation, South Africa, Kenya and Nigeria, this timely paper maintains that although GIs present promises of socioeconomic development, policymakers, lawmakers and relevant African stakeholders must caution against their often-overlooked pitfalls. As ultimately, it is the responsibility of Africans, not foreigners, to guarantee the generation of thriving GI ecosystems for African products.