In this thought-provoking analysis, the author takes three examples of
emerging markets (Brazil, India, and Nigeria) and tells their stories of
pharmaceutical patent law-making.
Adopting historiographical and socio-legal approaches, focus is drawn to
the role of history, social networks and how relationships between a
variety of actors shape the framing of, and subsequently the responses
to, national implementation of international patent law. In doing so,
the book reveals why the experience of Nigeria - a country active in
opposing the inclusion of IP to the WTO framework during the Uruguay
Rounds - is so different from that of Brazil and India.
This book makes an original and useful contribution to the further
understanding of how both states and non-state actors conceptualise,
establish and interpret pharmaceutical patents law, and its domestic
implications on medicines access, public health and development. Patent
Games in the Global South was awarded the 2018 SIEL-Hart Prize in
International Economic Law.