Trademark and unfair competition conflicts : historical-comparative, doctrinal, and economic perspectives / Tim W. Dornis.

By: Dornis, Tim W [author.]Material type: TextTextSeries: Cambridge intellectual property and information law: Publisher: Cambridge, United Kingdom ; New York, NY, USA : Cambridge University Press, 2017Copyright date: ©2017Description: lii, 644 pages ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781107155060; 1107155061Subject(s): Conflict of laws -- Trademarks | Conflict of laws -- Competition, Unfair | Trademarks -- Law and legislation | Competition, Unfair | Antitrust law | Antitrust law | Competition, Unfair | Conflict of laws -- Competition, Unfair | Conflict of laws -- Trademarks | Trademarks -- Law and legislation | Internationales Markenrecht | Unlauterer Wettbewerb | Internationales WettbewerbsrechtDDC classification: 346.04/88 LOC classification: K7571 | .D67 2017Other classification: KN114.2
Contents:
Civil law history : Germany and Europe -- Common law history : United States -- A ragged landscape of theories -- Substantive policy : convergent foundations -- International comity : a doctrine of self-restraint -- Reconceptualization, reinterpretation, and typology.
Summary: "Both in Europe and the United States, a socioeconomic cataclysm of industrialization and market liberalization-including the invention of branding, mass advertising, and marketing psychology-was the driving force behind the construction of modern trademark and unfair competition laws. During the last two centuries, legal doctrine accordingly underwent partly groundbreaking transformations. Many of these account for today's transatlantic dichotomy, particularly in the field of trademark and unfair competition choice of law, or conflicts law. My analysis will focus on the most relevant characteristics of legal doctrine between the eighteenth and twenty-first centuries. I argue that a closer look at conceptual and structural differences, as well as commonalities between European and US law, provides the basis for a reconceptualization of the field"-- Provided by publisher.
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Includes bibliographical references and index.

Civil law history : Germany and Europe -- Common law history : United States -- A ragged landscape of theories -- Substantive policy : convergent foundations -- International comity : a doctrine of self-restraint -- Reconceptualization, reinterpretation, and typology.

"Both in Europe and the United States, a socioeconomic cataclysm of industrialization and market liberalization-including the invention of branding, mass advertising, and marketing psychology-was the driving force behind the construction of modern trademark and unfair competition laws. During the last two centuries, legal doctrine accordingly underwent partly groundbreaking transformations. Many of these account for today's transatlantic dichotomy, particularly in the field of trademark and unfair competition choice of law, or conflicts law. My analysis will focus on the most relevant characteristics of legal doctrine between the eighteenth and twenty-first centuries. I argue that a closer look at conceptual and structural differences, as well as commonalities between European and US law, provides the basis for a reconceptualization of the field"-- Provided by publisher.

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