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Well-known Trade Marks by Hiroko Onishi

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Well-known Trade Marks

A Comparative Study of Japan and the EU

Hiroko Onishi

Taylor and Francis · Print & ebook · June 30, 2015

Reading lane: Japanese Literary Criticism

This book considers the effectiveness of well-known trade mark protection at an international level.

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At a Glance

Who It's For

Reading lane: Japanese Literary Criticism and International Taxation.Publisher: Taylor and Francis.

Book Details

Authors
Hiroko Onishi
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Published
June 30, 2015
Format
Print & ebook
Theme
Japanese Literary Criticism · International Taxation
Reading lane
Japanese Literary Criticism

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About This Book

This book considers the effectiveness of well-known trade mark protection at an international level. It particularly considers EU trade mark law from Japanese perspectives, and provides a practical and critical overview of trade mark law in Japan, including the historical development of the law and the recent development on cases and policy. The book includes detailed coverage of the Japanese Unfair Competition Prevention Act, and contains the first systematic analysis of Ja...

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This book considers the effectiveness of well-known trade mark protection at an international level. It particularly considers EU trade mark law from Japanese perspectives, and provides a practical and critical overview of trade mark law in Japan, including the historical development of the law and the recent development on cases and policy. The book includes detailed coverage of the Japanese Unfair Competition Prevention Act, and contains the first systematic analysis of Japanese jurisprudence and legislative amendments of law in relation to well-known trade marks and unfair competition. The book goes on to comparatively analyse Japanese trade mark law alongside that of the European Community Trade Mark system. The book critically considers the difficulties in comprehensively defining a ¿well-known trade mark¿ in the relevant international trade mark instruments. In breaking down the traditional definition of the ¿well-known trade mark¿, the book works to address existing theoretical ambiguities in the application of trade mark law.

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