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23 June 2011 / John Critchley
Issue: 7471 / Categories: Blogs
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Book review Intellectual Property and Private International Law (2nd edition, 2011)

Authors: James J Fawcett & Paul Torremans

ISBN: 978-0-19-955658-8
Publisher: Oxford University Press        
Price: £195.00

This is an excellent work and it is long overdue, as the authors admit in their preface to this 2nd edition.  The 1st edition was published in 1998 and  since then there have been huge changes in both private international law and the law of intellectual property.  

This is also an unusual work because it manages to combine a rigorous, practical statement of the law as it now stands with a valuable critique of that existing position and thoughtful and well-informed proposals for reform.

The book has the look and feel and gravitas of a standard practitioners’ text and provides coverage of all the main topics one would expect to see. It is divided into three sections: jurisdiction; applicable law; and recognition and enforcement of foreign judgements. Among other virtues, this allows for full treatment of the replacement of the Brussels Convention by the Brussels I Regulation; the Rome I

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NEWS

The Court of Appeal has slammed the brakes on claimants trying to swap defendants after limitation has expired. In Adcamp LLP v Office Properties and BDB Pitmans v Lee [2026] EWCA Civ 50, it overturned High Court rulings that had allowed substitutions under s 35(6)(b) of the Limitation Act 1980, reports Sarah Crowther of DAC Beachcroft in this week's NLJ

A seemingly dry procedural update may prove potent. In his latest 'Civil way' column for NLJ this week, Stephen Gold explains that new CPR 31.12A—part of the 193rd update—fills a ‘lacuna’ exposed in McLaren Indy v Alpa Racing
The long-running Mazur saga edged towards its finale as the Court of Appeal heard arguments on whether non-solicitors can ‘conduct litigation’. Writing in NLJ this week, Professor Dominic Regan of City Law School reports from a packed courtroom where 16 wigs watched Nick Bacon KC argue that Mr Justice Sheldon had failed to distinguish between ‘tasks and responsibilities’
Cheating in driving tests is surging—and courts are responding firmly. Writing in NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth of De Montfort Law School charts a rise in impersonation and tech-assisted fraud, with 2,844 attempts recorded in a year
As AI-generated ‘deepfake’ images proliferate, the law may already have the tools to respond. In NLJ this week, Jon Belcher of Excello Law argues that such images amount to personal data processing under UK GDPR
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