Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property: Meaning (information, definition, explanation, facts)

The Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property, signed in Paris, France, on March 20, 1883, is an important and one of the first intellectual property treaties. Thanks to this treaty, intellectual property systems, including patents, of any contracting state are accessible to the nationals of other states party to the Convention.

The priority right is also established by this treaty: it provides that an applicant from one contracting State shall be able to use its first filing date (in one of the contracting State) as the effective filing date in another contracting State, provided that he files another application within 6 (for trademarks) or 12 months (for patents) from the first filing.

History

After a diplomatic conference in Paris in 1880, the Convention was signed in 1883 by 11 countries: Belgium, Brazil, France, Guatemala, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal, Salvador, Serbia, Spain and Switzerland.

The Treaty was revised at Brussels, Belgium, on December 141900, at Washington, United States, on June 21911, at The Hague, The Netherlands, on November 61925, at London, United Kingdom, on June 21934, at Lisbon, Portugal, on October 311958, and at Stockholm, Sweden, on July 141967, and was amended on September 281979.

The Convention has now about 164 country members, which makes it one of the most widely adopted (or maybe the most adopted) treaty worldwide (though Taiwan is not party of the Convention).

Administration

The Paris Convention is administered by the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO), based in Geneva, Switzerland.

References

  • Guide to the Application of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property As Revised at Stockholm in 1967, G.H.C. Bodenhausen, (World Intellectual Property; February 1, 1968) ISBN 9280503685

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工業所有権の保護に関するパリ条約
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