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About
MIHR
PIPRA
Fiocruz, Brazil
bioDevelopments- Institute
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BREWSTER, Amanda L
Amanda Brewster serves as a Policy Officer for the Wellcome Trust in London. Previously, she worked as a Program Associate of the Science and Intellectual Property in the Public Interest project of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) in Washington, D.C. She has also worked on science policy for the National Council for Science and the Environment. Although she has conducted field research on the vector ecology of Lyme disease and on insect pollination, in recent years she has used her training as a biologist to study the intersections of scientific research, innovation, human health, and the environment. She holds a master’s degree in international health policy from the London School of Economics and Political Science and a bachelor’s degree in molecular, cellular, and developmental biology from Yale University.
Abstract
Facilitating Humanitarian Access to Pharmaceutical and Agricultural Innovation
Abstract:
Because certain patenting and licensing strategies can inhibit the development and dissemination of products for developing countries, intellectual property management strategies need to be developed that can help remove some of these obstacles. It is equally important to apply creative patent management strategies that actively promote access to needed products in developing countries. Care must be taken, however, to ensure that patents on research inputs do not discourage or unreasonably increase the cost for product development that targets needs in small or unprofitable markets. The American Association for the Advancement of Science project on Science and Intellectual Property in the Public Interest convened a working group to explore these issues in 2004. This chapter draws upon the expertise of that group to identify licensing strategies that are effective in promoting humanitarian access to health and agricultural product innovations and expanding their use among poor and disadvantaged groups, particularly in low-income countries. The chapter encourages more public sector IP managers to understand and employ strategies that will achieve these goals and seeks to help private sector licensees to understand the rationale behind and potential benefits of such strategies. Indeed, humanitarian licensing strategies should more and more become the norm by contributing to the development and dissemination of essential medicines and agricultural technologies for developing countries.
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