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11 Indian J. L. & Tech. 1 (2015)

handle is hein.journals/indiajoula11 and id is 1 raw text is: 













  THE INDIAN JOURNAL OF LAW AND TECHNOLOGY
                              Volume  11, 2015

                 PATENTING HUMAN GENES:

   WHEREIN LIES THE BALANCE BETWEEN PRIVATE
       RIGHTS AND PUBLIC ACCESS IN INDIA AND
                      THE UNITED STATES?

                        Elizabeth  Siew-Kuan   NG

                                 ABSTRACT

      This article examines the patentability of human genes by evaluating
      where the balance should lie between the protection of private rights
      and public access for the promotion of further innovation and public
      health. The author investigates this issue by providing a comparative
      study on the approaches adopted in India and the United States - two
      highly divergent nations that offer unique contrasts in a comparative
      analysis of their patent regimes. The outcome of the appraisal discerns a
      potential convergence in the Indian and US approaches on certain aspects
      of human  gene patent-eligibility. This interesting result reveals that
      contrary to intuition, the differences in the state of economic,
      technological and patent law developments are not necessarily inimical
      to the prospect of adopting a common approach on certain facets of
      patent law, such as, those relating to the patent-eligibility of isolated
      genes. Moreover, the differences in the respective constitutional mandates

*   Associate Professor of Law, Deputy Chair and Director (Intellectual Property), Centre for
    Law &  Business; Director, LLM (IP & Technology Law) program; Director, Graduate
    Certificate of IP (GCIP) program; Faculty of Law, National University of Singapore; LL.B
    (Hons) (University of London); LL.M (First Class) (University of Cambridge); Barrister-at-
    Law (Middle Temple, London); Advocate & Solicitor (Singapore). My sincere thanks to Divij
    Joshi, Shreya Kundu and L. Gopika Murthy (Chief Editor) (National Law School of India
    University, Bangalore, India) and Wong Yong Quan, Benjamin (NUS LLB Class of 2015,
    Singapore) for their excellent research assistance; to my colleague Stephen Phua for invaluable
    editorial assistance; and to the anonymous referees for their helpful comments. The views
    expressed and any errors are solely those of the author.

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