Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context

Pharmaceutical firms’ use of strategic patenting to influence the markets within which their patented inventions sit is legally questionable. Such patenting entails filing patents with the intention of blocking potential competitors from innovating and/or being granted patents within niche tec...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Vuyisile Hobololo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: LINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM) 2015-12-01
Series:The African Journal of Information and Communication
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/19317
id doaj-212ff747238f49a8a74f1932ad8ed79a
record_format Article
spelling doaj-212ff747238f49a8a74f1932ad8ed79a2020-11-25T02:59:34ZengLINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM)The African Journal of Information and Communication2077-72052077-72132015-12-0116 7881https://doi.org/10.23962/10539/19317Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African ContextVuyisile HobololoPharmaceutical firms’ use of strategic patenting to influence the markets within which their patented inventions sit is legally questionable. Such patenting entails filing patents with the intention of blocking potential competitors from innovating and/or being granted patents within niche technology areas of interest to the patentee. Under this practice, patentees are potentially able to extend the breadth and duration of their monopoly power in the pharmaceutical market sub-sector within which that invention sits. Such practices take on a clear public interest element if they undermine affordable public access to medicines. This thematic report outlines forms of strategic patenting, analyses the degree to which the South African legal system provides remedies against such patenting, and proposes ways forward for South Africa to prevent such practices.http://hdl.handle.net/10539/19317patentspharmaceuticalsstrategic patentingpublic interestaccesscompulsory licensingcompetitionsouth africa
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vuyisile Hobololo
spellingShingle Vuyisile Hobololo
Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context
The African Journal of Information and Communication
patents
pharmaceuticals
strategic patenting
public interest
access
compulsory licensing
competition
south africa
author_facet Vuyisile Hobololo
author_sort Vuyisile Hobololo
title Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context
title_short Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context
title_full Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context
title_fullStr Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context
title_full_unstemmed Strategic Patenting of Pharmaceutical Inventions and the Public’s Right to Access Medicines: The South African Context
title_sort strategic patenting of pharmaceutical inventions and the public’s right to access medicines: the south african context
publisher LINK Centre, School of Literature Language and Media (SLLM)
series The African Journal of Information and Communication
issn 2077-7205
2077-7213
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Pharmaceutical firms’ use of strategic patenting to influence the markets within which their patented inventions sit is legally questionable. Such patenting entails filing patents with the intention of blocking potential competitors from innovating and/or being granted patents within niche technology areas of interest to the patentee. Under this practice, patentees are potentially able to extend the breadth and duration of their monopoly power in the pharmaceutical market sub-sector within which that invention sits. Such practices take on a clear public interest element if they undermine affordable public access to medicines. This thematic report outlines forms of strategic patenting, analyses the degree to which the South African legal system provides remedies against such patenting, and proposes ways forward for South Africa to prevent such practices.
topic patents
pharmaceuticals
strategic patenting
public interest
access
compulsory licensing
competition
south africa
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/19317
work_keys_str_mv AT vuyisilehobololo strategicpatentingofpharmaceuticalinventionsandthepublicsrighttoaccessmedicinesthesouthafricancontext
_version_ 1724701581596688384