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  • Joyce A Tan & Partners in Singapore look at the proposed changes to Singapore's competition regime, and the effect they will have on IP licensing agreements
  • July 1 saw the introduction of a new intellectual property regime in Singapore after the country overhauled its rules on patents, trade marks, copyright and protection for plant varieties. Emma Barraclough spoke to Lee Li Choon, director of trade marks at the Intellectual Property Office of Singapore (IPOS) and Chiam Lu Lin, IPOS’s assistant director-general of registries, about what the changes to the law mean for IP owners
  • Singapore has gone all out to position itself as an international biotech and pharmaceutical R&D centre. As more and more companies pour money into the island state, Emma Barraclough looks at how Singapore became the darling of the biomedical multinationals
  • The Licensing Executives Society is a leading forum for patent owners seeking to maximize the value of their portfolio. Kathleen Denis, this year's LES President, explains the full range of the organization's functions
  • Decision 486 brought about change for IP owners in the Andean Community. Yulena Sánchez-Hoet and Carlos Dominguez-Hernandez of Hoet Peláez Castillo & Duque provide an insight into Venezuela's IP system and explain the benefits of the injunctive relief
  • Legislative changes are likely to make life easier for IP owners in Italy. Michel Jolicoeur and Cristiano Bacchini of Racheli & C and Studio Legale Bilardo outline the benefits of the country's specialized IP courts and how the new IP code changes the landscape for trade mark proceedings, employee inventors' rights and domain names
  • China's new patent law has widened the number of venues where rights holders can seek redress. Ren Haiyan and Hong Yan of Wan Hui Da Intellectual Property Agency in Beijing explore the new options
  • The influx of new judicial decisions has streamlined India's IP rights protection system, bringing it more in line with international enforcement practices. Ameet Datta and Sagar Chandra from Anand and Anand explain
  • EU enlargement has increased the practical difficulties for patent owners and decision makers to get or refuse a compulsory licence request in Hungary. Michael Lantos of Danubia Patent & Trademark Attorneys outlines the potential hurdles of the system and how it can be used to enforce one's rights