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1

U.S. Dept. of Energy. Characterization, monitoring, and sensor technology integrated program (CMST-IP): Technology summary. U.S. Dept. of Energy, Office of Environmental Management, Office of Technology Development, 1994.

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2

U.S. Dept. of Energy. Characterization, monitoring, and sensor technology integrated program (CMST-IP): Technology summary. U.S. Dept. of Energy, 1994.

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3

McGaughey, William. The Independence Party and the future of third-party politics: Adventures & opinions of an IP Senate candidate. Thistlerose Publications, 2003.

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4

Kovalenko, Vladimir. Design of information systems. INFRA-M Academic Publishing LLC., 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.12737/987869.

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The tutorial discusses the design features of information systems (is) involved in the implementation of CALS technologies: MRP/MRPII/ERP systems, e-Commerce systems (B2B), supply chain management (SCM), customer relationship management (CRM), and decision support systems (OLAP). The issues of choosing the design technology, software tools for project development, building functional and information models in the environment of Business Studio, MS Visio, Elma, AllFusion Modeling Suite and Oracle Designer 10g, as well as the development of technical and operational documentation are highlighted. The characteristics of CASE technologies and their implementation in the Oracle Designer 10g environment are considered. A comparative analysis of the standards of the organization of the life cycle of creating and using IP, practical recommendations for the development of standard profiles, examples of the development of an IP project based on a cascading model of the life cycle, including using a process approach in the management and automation of processes. The models of the client — server architecture and the structure of cloud computing are considered. Modern approaches to the selection of ready-made is and their implementation in automated enterprises are studied in detail.
 Meets the requirements of the Federal state educational standards of higher education of the latest generation.
 It is intended for students (bachelors and specialists) and masters of higher educational institutions studying in the direction of "Applied Informatics". It is also recommended for teachers and specialists working in the field of information technology.
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5

United States. Department of Homeland Security. Office of Inspector General. DHS must address Internet Protocol Version 6 challenges. U.S. Dept. of Homeland Security, Office of Inspector General, 2008.

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6

Dabula, Anelisa. OER Development Models: Opening Post-School Education in South Africa through a Coordinated OER Strategy. African Minds, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.47622/9781928502425_p09.

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Given the many challenges facing higher education – such as the massification of the sector, rising student costs, high textbook prices, a growing digital divide and the undersupply of Global South learning materials – open educational resources (OER) have been proposed as one of a number of elements that can help address these challenges. As openly licensed educational resources that can be used, adapted and shared by anyone (Butcher 2010), OER are a versatile innovation that can open up learning by disrupting static intellectual property (IP), publishing and funding regimes. This is especially true in South Africa where, over the last decade, open education advocates have been making the case for greater OER engagement at national higher education institutions (HEIs) (Hodgkinson-Williams & Arinto 2017). They have made the case that OER can reduce education costs for students, increase resource relevance in the South African context and increase collaborative opportunities between educators and students (Masuku et al. 2021).
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7

Grosse Ruse-Khan, Henning. Intellectual Property and International Investment Agreements. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199663392.003.0007.

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This chapter examines selected issues on the scope of intellectual property (IP) protection under international investment law and contrasts this with the approach of the international IP system. It first reviews the extent to which IP amounts to a protected investment. The chapter then analyses the operation of national treatment and most favoured nation (MFN) in international investment agreements (IIAs) and international IP treaties. Some of the absolute standards of treatment owed by a host state to a foreign investor under most IIAs are examined in their application to IP rights. Finally, this chapter scrutinises the extent to which obligations from the international IP system can be subject to investor–state dispute settlement (ISDS).
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8

American Bar Association. Section of Intellectual Property Law, ed. Developing an intellectual property (IP) law practice: Case studies of IP law practitioners who have started an IP law practice. American Bar Association, 2012.

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9

Grosse Ruse-Khan, Henning. Conflict Rules and Integration Principles in the International IP System. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199663392.003.0012.

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This chapter first looks at the (few) formal conflict rules in the international intellectual property (IP) system. It focusses on those found in the Trade Related Aspects of International Property Rights (TRIPS) Agreement. It then assesses those rules and principles that are not about directly allowing other international norms to prevail, but rather indirectly allow states implementing IP treaties and adjudicative bodies interpreting them to take into account external norms and the interests and objectives they protect. Next, the chapter provides an overview of three different areas where the international IP system has either provided specific responses to its intersections with other areas of international law, or where such a response is under negotiation in international IP fora. Finally, this chapter turns to the main horizontal tool in TRIPS and other IP treaties that allows states to take into account other interests and objectives that coincide or conflict with IP protection: the so called ‘three-step-test’.
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10

Seville, Catherine. The Emergence and Development of Intellectual Property Law in Western Europe. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.12.

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This chapter surveys the emergence and development of Intellectual Property (IP) law in Continental Europe and Britain. The story begins largely in the middle ages with the grant of territorially-confined inventors’ and printers’ privileges, and traces the development of these privileges into the four main species of IP rights recognized throughout the world today. A key theme is the varied national histories that underpin the development of each IP right even within the geographical confines and relative social and political homogeneity of Western Europe, and the extent of modern IP law’s embeddedness in the industrial and cultural development of individual states. The chapter ends with an account of the emergence of a European perspective on IP, as expressed in the nineteenth-century Paris and Berne Conventions, and its development by general and IP-specific European communities, including the EU, which has established unitary patent, trademark, and design rights for its Member States.
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11

Hemphill, C. Scott. Intellectual Property and Competition Law. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.32.

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This chapter surveys the intersection of competition law—or antitrust law, as it is known in the United States—with intellectual property (IP). It examines whether and how IP rights alter the substantive scope of antitrust law, either by operation of statute or as a matter of economic policy. It discusses a wide variety of antitrust claims, alleging collusion, exclusion, or both, that have been raised against IP rights holders. The examples are drawn mainly from the United States, although European developments are also included where relevant. The analysis supports the conclusion that, beyond a rights holder’s core ability to assert a valid, infringed right against a rival, IP restricts antitrust law less than one might expect. Moreover, the restrictions that do exist are often subtle.
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12

Pila, Justine. An Overview of Intellectual Property Rights and Systems. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199688616.003.0002.

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This chapter considers the nature, aims, and values of intellectual property (IP) rights and systems. It traces the emergence of statutory IP laws in Europe from the 15th century as means of facilitating and rewarding the introduction to the public of certain intangible expressive and informational objects of social value, and the different IP philosophies that they reflect. It then considers the IP rights and systems of European and UK law today, and their vesting of temporary exclusive rights in respect of different categories of ‘intellectual creation’, broadly conceived. The EU is presented as seeking, through its recognition and protection of IP rights, to build on the traditions of its Member States in a manner that is consistent with both its international commitments and its particular economic and social values and aims. The result of this objective is considered, along with certain distinctions of importance to IP rights and systems.
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13

Pila, Justine, and Paul Torremans. European Intellectual Property Law. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/he/9780198831280.001.0001.

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European Intellectual Property Law offers a full account of the nature, context, and effect of European IP law. The amount and reach of European law- and decision-making in the field of intellectual property has grown exponentially since the 1960s, making it increasingly difficult to treat European IP regimes as mere adjuncts to domestic and international regimes. European Intellectual Property Law responds to this reality by presenting a clear and detailed account of each of the main European IP systems, including the areas of substantive IP law on which they are based. The result is a full account of the European intellectual property field, presented in the context of both the EU legal system and international IP law, including EU constitutional law, the law of the European Patent Convention 1973/2000, and private international law. By drawing selectively on examples from domestic IP regimes, the text also illustrates substantive differences between those regimes and demonstrates the impact of European law and decision-making on EU Member States. The result is a modern treatment of European IP law that goes beyond a discussion of the provisions of individual legal instruments to consider their wider context and effect.
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14

Alter, Karen J., Laurence R. Helfer, and M. Florencia Guerzovich. Islands of Effective International Adjudication. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199680788.003.0005.

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This chapter explains how the Andean Tribunal of Justice (ATJ) became both active and effective with respect to intellectual property (IP) disputes, and why IP remains an island of effective adjudication that has not expanded to other areas of Andean law. It describes the ATJ's interactions with the domestic administrative agencies responsible for IP and explores how the ATJ's rulings shaped agency decisions and procedures to bolster adherence to the rule of law. The chapter also documents how the relationship between Andean judges and agency officials enabled the ATJ to confront national governments under pressure from the United States and multinational drug companies to violate Andean law. It demonstrates that Andean IP rules differ from those elsewhere in Latin America. Finally, this chapter explains how the legal and institutional contexts within which Andean IP rules are embedded help to bolster the island's stability and protect it from significant meddling by governments.
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15

Ncube, Caroline B. Three Centuries and Counting. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.21.

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This chapter provides a historical account of the development of intellectual property (IP) law on the African continent, and how IP systems and their transposed legislation displaced existing knowledge governance systems. It discusses how the entrenched primarily extractor-biased IP system in the post-TRIPs era led to a compliance confidence crisis in which ill-equipped African states were overwhelmed by the political dynamics that led to a compliance overdrive manifested in developing countries and least-developed countries (LDCs) enacting provisions they were not required to enact under prevailing transitional periods. In this context, it canvasses the continent’s attempt to leverage fully TRIPS flexibilities, and discusses the current continental IP system. It briefly considers the protection of traditional knowledge and plant varieties as exemplars of aspects of IP that are critical to the continent due to the nature of the primacy of a traditional way of life for a significant portion of its population.
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16

Grosse Ruse-Khan, Henning. IP Rights in International Environmental Law. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780199663392.003.0011.

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This chapter focusses on the two core aspects of the relationship between intellectual property (IP) rights and international environmental law. This interface is embodied in two related, but discernible rule systems. On the one hand, natural and biological resources are increasingly serving as important input or source for innovative human activities, often leading to IP rights granted over the resulting technology. On the other, whenever IP rights are granted over technologies or plant varieties that involve genetic resources, conflicts between the property rights of an individual IP holder and those who claim ownership (such as a state) over the biological resources may arise. The main international treaties applicable here are the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and its Nagoya Protocol on Access to Genetic Resources and the Fair and Equitable Sharing of Benefits Arising from their Utilization (NP).
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17

Maniatis, Spyros, Ioannis Kokkoris, and Xiaoye Wang, eds. Competition Law and Intellectual Property in China. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/law-ocl/9780198793526.001.0001.

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Abstract The last few years have seen an intense enforcement record of the Public Republic of China Anti-Monopoly Law (“AML”) by the Chinese competition authorities, Ministry of Commerce (“MOFCOM”), State Administration for Industry and Commerce (“SAIC”) and National Development and Reform Commission (“NDRC”). They actively enforce the AML through voluminous investigations and the courts have issued several thorough and intriguing judgments with respect to AML disputes. In relation to IP enforcement, all of China's IP laws are undergoing transformation — patent, trademark, and copyright laws — as well as numerous other IP-related regulations, including standards measures; service invention regulations; and regulations related to criminal enforcement. In addition, other more general laws have been amended or are under reform with important implications for global IP enforcement. The civil procedure law was recently amended, with potentially important repercussions for IP rights holders, particularly in terms of provisional measures for trade secrets. This book presents an up-to-date, detailed analysis of the different perspectives that these jurisdictions take in the enforcement of competition and IP law. It discusses the current trend as well as the future challenges of the enforcement in these areas and aims to further our understanding of these controversial and fast-paced issues by offering insights and recommendations on the basis of a comprehensive analysis.
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18

Gervais, Daniel. The Emergence and Development of Intellectual Property Law in Canada. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.16.

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This chapter reviews the emergence of intellectual property (IP) norms in the areas of copyright, trademarks, patents, and designs in Canadian law from the early days of the Dominion’s complex relationship with British IP statutes and policy to a time of progressive independence from those statutes. It then reviews more recent changes, some of which were made to bring Canada’s laws into line with major international registration systems. Canada has also been ready to experiment with variations on IP themes. This is visible both in statutes and in decisions by the Supreme Court of Canada. The impact of the bijural nature of Canada’s legal system and its proximity to the United States are also discussed: Canada has integrated civil law notions into an edifice constructed mostly of common law bricks, and must confront demands from its most important trading partner in adapting its intellectual property framework.
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19

Characterization, monitoring, and sensor technology integrated program (CMST-IP): Technology summary. U.S. Dept. of Energy, Office of Environmental Management, Office of Technology Development, 1994.

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20

Alter, Karen J., and Laurence R. Helfer. The Andean Tribunal of Justice and its Interlocutors. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199680788.003.0003.

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This chapter presents data on national court interactions with the Andean Tribunal. It analyzes case referral patterns from each of the five member states and discusses cross-country variations. The chapter also explains the resistance of some national courts to referring cases and how that resistance was eventually overcome. In addition, this chapter highlights the fundamentally different nature of the Andean Tribunal of Justice's (ATJ's) relationships with national judges as compared to the analogous relationships in the European Community (EC). In Europe, the symbiosis between the European Union's Court of Justice (ECJ) and national courts helped to build integration through law. In the Andes, effective international adjudication is mostly an island confined to intellectual property (IP) disputes. Domestic administrative agencies that review IP applications are the ATJ's primary interlocutors and compliance partners; national judges have remained largely passive intermediaries.
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21

Owning and using scholarship: An IP handbook for teachers and researchers. American Library Association, Association of College and Research Libraries, 2014.

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22

Lemley, Mark A., and Mark D. Janis. Ip and Antitrust: An Analysis of Antitrust Principles Applied to Intellectual Property Law. Aspen Law & Business Publishers, 2001.

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23

Beebe, Barton. Design Protection. Edited by Rochelle Dreyfuss and Justine Pila. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198758457.013.25.

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This chapter surveys the legal protection of industrial designs, understood as the protection of the appearance of articles of manufacture. It discusses the definition of “design” according to both the European Union (EU) and the United States (US). It examines the international instruments that form the foundation of industrial design law, including the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), the Paris Convention, and the Berne Convention, among others. It then focuses on the various areas of intellectual property (IP) law that make up design law, including sui generis design protection law, patent law, copyright law, and trademark law among others, with particular attention on these aspects of design law as they feature in the US and the EU.
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24

Dejus, Sanda. Rokasgrāmata notekūdeņu dūņu apsaimniekotājiem. RTU Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.7250/9789934227127.

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In terms of biological wastewater treatment processes used for the treatment of municipal wastewater excess activated sludge is inevitably generated, which needs to be removed from the wastewater treatment process and must be properly processed, recycled, and disposed of. The handbook provides information on wastewater and sewage sludge management techniques, treatment and recycling technologies, various possible alternative solutions to ensure the high quality, economic and environmentally friendly management of it. The handbook is developed on the basis of the technical solutions and economic calculations included in the national planning document “Sewage Sludge Management Strategy in Latvia” (project), resulting from an analysis of the existing situation in terms of the project “Implementation of River Basin Management Plans of Latvian towards good surface water status” (LIFE18 IPE/LV/000014 - LIFE GOODWATER IP) that are included in the deliverables of the project.
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25

Ojakangas, Mika. Plato. Edinburgh University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.3366/edinburgh/9781474423632.003.0019.

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There are not many books by Agamben in which Plato does not figure. In The Man Without Content (MC 52–64), Agamben discusses the Platonic discrepancy between politics and poetry; in Stanzas, he examines Plato’s conceptions of love (S 115–21) and phantasm (S 73–5); in Infancy and History (IH 73), Agamben takes up Plato’s concept of time (aion and chronos), while in The End of the Poem (EP 17) he examines Plato’s criticism of tragedy. In Language and Death (LD 91–2), he gives an account of Socrates’ ‘demon’ and Plato’s Idea (eidos) – though he investigates the latter more thoroughly in Potentialities (PO 27–38), in which he also briefly touches upon Plato’s doctrine of matter (khôra) (PO 218). In Idea of Prose (IP 120–3) and The ComingCommunity (CC 76–7), it is the Platonic Idea again that is under scrutiny, albeit more implicitly than in Potentialities. In Homo Sacer (HS 33–5), Agamben offers an interpretation of Plato’s treatment of Pindar’s nomos basileus fragment and the sophistic opposition between nomos and physis, whereas in The Sacrament of Language (SL 29) he touches on Plato’s critique of oath. In The Signature of All Things (ST 22–6), Agamben gives an account of Plato’s ‘paradigmatic’ method, while in Stasis (STA 5–12) we find an analysis of Plato’s conception of civil war (stasis).
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26

Intellectual property protection as economic policy: Will China ever enforce its IP laws? : roundtable before the Congressional-Executive Commission on China, One Hundred Ninth Congress, first session, May 16, 2005. U.S. G.P.O., 2005.

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27

International IP enforcement: Protecting patents, trade secrets and market access : hearing before the Subcommittee on Intellectual Property, Competition, and the Internet of the Committee on the Judiciary, House of Representatives, One Hundred Twelfth Congress, second session, June 27, 2012. U.S. G.P.O., 2012.

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