WIPO continues push for Marrakesh Treaty ratification

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

WIPO continues push for Marrakesh Treaty ratification

Even countries that already have laws providing for copyright exceptions for persons with visual disabilities may have to amend their laws before ratifying or acceding to the treaty

Nine out of 82 signatories have ratified or acceded to the treaty, one of the few multilateral IP treaties at a time when bilateral agreements are increasingly popular. The treaty will come into effect once 20 countries ratify or accede to it.

The treaty requires the party countries to provide exceptions to allow copyright-protected works to be made accessible for persons with visual impairments in formats such as braille, audio and large print. The treaty also has provisions allowing accessible works to be made available across borders.

One of the tasks that countries must accomplish to ratify is to amend their laws to provide for these exceptions. According to Candra Darusman, deputy director of WIPO's Singapore office, one of the challenges is that even for countries that already have laws providing for copyright exceptions for accessible works, many still need to revise their laws to account for concepts in the treaties. For example, he notes that some countries already have provisions that provide exceptions, but their laws may use the term “blind” rather than the broader term “persons with print disabilities”. Similarly, some countries need to amend their laws to define what an "authorised entity" is as the term is used in the treaty.

Several jurisdictions are working on the legislative revisions needed to ratify the treaty. Last year, the EU Council announced that it would like to see ratification of the treaty soon. In May, the Council adopted a decision asking the EU Commission to submit the legislative proposals required to ratify the treaty.

Mexico was the most recent country to ratify the treaty, doing so on July 29.

"The Marrakesh Treaty is quite an achievement," Darusman said. "It is the first multilateral treaty providing for exceptions for persons with print disabilities, so it is especially important that it gets ratified."

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

AIPPI has pulled the plug on its planned 2027 World Congress, and INTA has seemingly committed to hosting a meeting there, but the concerns won’t abate
Despite being outspent by a wealthy opponent, a trial attorney at King & Spalding says ‘relentless pursuit of the truth’ helped his team secure a $420m damages award for mobile gaming client
190 drugs face loss of exclusivity between 2026 and 2030, with the list including Bristol Myers Squibb’s blood-thinning drug Eliquis and immunotherapy medication Opdivo
Nokia, represented by a team from Bird & Bird, adjudged to have made fair offer to Asus and Acer in UK SEP dispute
Azhar Sadique and Kane Ridley, who founded the London office in 2023, are now both working in legal tech and AI-related roles, while another UK-based lawyer has also left
Partner Pierre Pérot rejoins the firm he left in 2022 alongside another returning lawyer, associate Camille Abba
Vaping dispute, in which Stobbs and Brandsmiths are the representatives, tested how the UK's Human Rights Act can apply to injunctions restraining unjustified threats
An AI platform being sold for £40m, and lateral hires involving law firms Womble Bond Dickinson and Cadwell Thomas were among the top talking points
With the London Annual Meeting behind us, we look back at some of the lessons learned this week and ahead to what 2027 will bring
In-house counsel aren’t impressed with law firms’ international networks, but practitioners say they are crucial for business
Gift this article