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 CTS at the 3rd meeting of WIPO Provisional Committee for Proposals Related to a Development Agenda (PCDA)

During Brazilian Carnival, on the 19th of February began the third meeting of the WIPO Provisional Committee for Proposals Related to a Development Agenda (PCDA), a serie of discussions on World Intellectual Property Organization ’s Development Agenda, in Geneva. Reporting direct from Switzerland, the Center for Technology and Society of Fundação Getúlio Vargas School of Law published a serie of posts on A2K Brazil website.

The Development Agenda was proposed at the WIPO General Assembly in September of 2004, primarily by Brazil and Argentina, that soon formed a 14 countries group, the called Friends of Development Group.

Joined this session 105 Member States of WIPO, plus 43 observers, including non-governmental organizations (NGOs) and intergovernmental organizations (IGOs).

At the end of the meeting, on the 23rd of February, it was adopted the President’s Resume, which mentions that on the 5th of April the Report Draft of this third PDCA session will be done and available on WIPO’s website. Comments on the Draft will be accepted due to the 20th of Aprl, so that it will achieve a final version.

The Resume has a four pages append in which are listed the agreed topics, divided in six cluters. The digital version, reproduced below, of the printed handed document was made available by the Yale Information Society Project.


Cluster A: Technical Assistance and Capacity Building

1. WIPO technical assistance shall be, inter alia, development-oriented, demand-driven and transparent, taking into account the priorities and the special needs of developing countries, especially LDCs, as well as the different levels of development of Member States and actvities should include time frames for completion. In this regard, design, delivery mechanisms and evaluations processes of technical assistance programs should be country specific.

2. Provide valuable assistance to WIPO through donor funding, and establish Trust-Funds or other voluntary funds within WIPO specifically for LDCs, whole continuing to accord high priority to finance activities in Africa through budgetary and extra-budgetary resources, to promote, inter alia, the legal, commercial, cultural, and economic exploitation of intellectual property in these countries.

3. Increase human and financial allocation for technical assistance programs in WIPO for promiting a, inter alia, development-oriented IP culture, with an emphasis on introducing intellectual property at different academic levels and on generating greater public awareness on IP.

4. Place particular emphasis on the needs of SMEs and institutions dealing with scientific research and cultural industries and assist Member States, at their request, in setting-up appropriate national strategies in the field of IP.

5. WIPO shall display general information on all technical assitance activities on its website, and shall provide, on request from Member states, details of specific activities, with the consent of the Member State(s) and other reicipients concerned, for which the activcity was implemented.

6. WIPO’s technical assitance staff and consultants shall continue to be neutral and accountable, by paying particular attention to the existing Code of Ethics, and by avoiding potential conflicts of interest. WIPO shall draw up and make widely known to the Member States a roster of consultants for technical assistance available with WIPO.

7. Promote measures that will help countries deal with IP-related anti-competitive practices, by providing technical cooperation to developing countries, especialy LDCs, at their request, in order to better understand the interface between intellectual property rights and competition policies.

8. Request WIPO to develop agreements with research institutions and with private enterprises with a view to facilitating the national offices of developing countries, especially LDCs, as well as their regional and sub-regional IP organizations to access specialized databases for the purposes of patent searches.

9. Request WIPO to create, in coordination with Member States, a database to match specific IP-related development needs with available resources, thereby expanding the scope of its technical assistance programs, aimed at bridging the digital divide.

Cluster B: Norm Setting, Flexibilities, Public Policy and Public Domain

1. Norm setting activities shall:
- be inclusive and member dirven;
- taken into account different levels of development
- take into consideration a blaance b/t costs and benefits
- be a particiaptory process, which takes into consideration the interests and priorities of all WIPO Member States and the viewpoints of other stakeholders, including accredited inter-governmental organizations and non-governmental organizatons; and
- be in line with the principle of neutrality of the WIPO Secretariat.

2. Consider the presrevation of the public domain within WIPO’s normative processes and deepen the analysis of the implications and beneifts of a rich and accessible public domain.

Cluster C: Technology Transfer, Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) and Access to Knowledge

1. To request WIPO, within its mandate, to expand the scope of its activities aimed at bridging the digital divide, in accordance with the outcomes of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) also taking into account the significance of the Digital Solidarity Fund (DSF).

2. To explore IP-related policies and initiatives necessary to promote the transfer and dissemination of technology, to the benefit of developing countries and to take appropriate measures to enable developing countries to fully understand and benefit from different provisions, pertaining to flexibilities provided for in international agreements, as appropriate.

3. To encourage Member States, especially developed countries, to urge their research and scientific institutions to enhance cooperation and exchange with research and development institutions in developing countries, especially LDCs.

4. Facilitating IP-related aspects of ICT for growth and development: Provide for, in an appropriate WIPO body, discussions focused on the importance of IP-related aspects of ICT, and its role in economic and cultural development, with specific attention focused on assisting Member States to identify practical IP-related strategies t use ICT for economic, social and cultural development.

5. To explore supportive IP-related policies and measures Member States, especially developed countries, could adopt for promoting transfer and dissemination of technology to developing countries.

Cluster D: Assessment, Evaluation and Impact Studies

1. To request WIPO to develop an effective yearly review and evaluation mechanism for the assessment of all its development-oriented activities, including those related to technical assistance, establishing for that purpose specific indicators and benchmarks, where appropriate.

2. With a view to assisting Member States in creating substantial national programs, to request WIPO to conduct a study on constraints to intellectual property protection in the informal economy, including the tangible costs and benefits of IP protection in particular in relation to generation of employment.

3. To request WIPO to undertake, upon request of Member States, new studies to assess the economic, social and cultural impact of the use of intellectual property systems in these States.

Cluster E: Institutional Matters including Mandate and Governance

1. To request WIPO, within its core competencies and mission, to assist developing countries, especially African countries, in cooperation with relevant international organizations, by conducting studies on brain drain and make recommendations accordingly.

2. To request WIPO to intensify its cooperation on IP related issues with UN agencies, according to Member States’ orientation, in particular UNCTAD, UNEP, WHO, UNIDO, UNESCO and other relevant international organizations, especially WTO in order to strengthen the coordination for maximum efficiency in undertaking development programs.

3. To conduct a review of current WIPO technical assistance activities in the area of cooperation and development.

4. To enhance measures that ensure wide participation of civil society at large in WIPO activities in accordance with its criteria regarding NGO acceptance and accreditation, keeping the issue under review.

Cluster F: Other Issues

1. To approach intellectual property enforcement in the context of broader societal interests and especially development-oriented concerns, with a view that "the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights should contribute to the promotion of technological innovation and to the transfer and dissemination of technology, to the mutual advantage of producers and users of technology knowledge and in a manner conducive to social and economic welfare, and to a balance of rights and obligations", in accordance with Article 7 of the TRIPS Agreement.

Comments
2. Saturday 22 September 2007 à 03:00,
CTS at the 3rd meeting of WIPO Provisional Committee for Proposals Related to a Development Agenda (PCDA)
3. Monday 8 October 2007 à 18:00,
CTS at the 3rd meeting of WIPO Provisional Committee for Proposals Related to a Development Agenda (PCDA)
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