Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement

The signing of the Transpacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) between twelve member countries, with Malaysia included, has set a new, higher benchmark for copyright enforcement. In three ways, the landscape of copyright law has been changed significantly. First, TPPA expand the coverage of the kinds...

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Main Author: Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/53084/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/53084/1/criminilisation%20complete_53084.pdf
id iium-53084
recordtype eprints
spelling iium-530842017-10-22T14:19:15Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/53084/ Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha K Law (General) The signing of the Transpacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) between twelve member countries, with Malaysia included, has set a new, higher benchmark for copyright enforcement. In three ways, the landscape of copyright law has been changed significantly. First, TPPA expand the coverage of the kinds of Intellectual Property recognised. Secondly, what constitute copyright violations has been expanded. Thirdly, sanctions for copyright piracy has been made tougher and sentencing lengths for such piracy has been lengthened. The usage of trade agreements to compel countries to improve copyright domestic policy is not a new strategy. The antecedent to TPPA is the TRIPs Agreement that was concluded on the basis that copyright piracy and counterfeiting has grown from just mere domestic nuisance to an effective barrier to free trade. This paper addresses the TPPA and analyses the rationale to the introduction of more stringent measures under TTPA. It seeks to understand the shift in the discourse of the policy makers regarding the 'severity' of copyright offences. It examines questions such as to what extent should copyright infringement be criminalised? Even if it is criminalised, why must it be imposed with more severe penalties than an ordinary economic crime? 2016-05-19 Conference or Workshop Item NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/53084/1/criminilisation%20complete_53084.pdf Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha (2016) Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement. In: The Third International Conference on Law, Business and Governance, 20-21 May 2016, Bandar Lampung University (UBL) Lampung, Indonesia.
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic K Law (General)
spellingShingle K Law (General)
Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha
Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
description The signing of the Transpacific Partnership Agreement (TPPA) between twelve member countries, with Malaysia included, has set a new, higher benchmark for copyright enforcement. In three ways, the landscape of copyright law has been changed significantly. First, TPPA expand the coverage of the kinds of Intellectual Property recognised. Secondly, what constitute copyright violations has been expanded. Thirdly, sanctions for copyright piracy has been made tougher and sentencing lengths for such piracy has been lengthened. The usage of trade agreements to compel countries to improve copyright domestic policy is not a new strategy. The antecedent to TPPA is the TRIPs Agreement that was concluded on the basis that copyright piracy and counterfeiting has grown from just mere domestic nuisance to an effective barrier to free trade. This paper addresses the TPPA and analyses the rationale to the introduction of more stringent measures under TTPA. It seeks to understand the shift in the discourse of the policy makers regarding the 'severity' of copyright offences. It examines questions such as to what extent should copyright infringement be criminalised? Even if it is criminalised, why must it be imposed with more severe penalties than an ordinary economic crime?
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha
author_facet Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha
author_sort Abdul Ghani Azmi, Ida Madieha
title Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
title_short Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
title_full Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
title_fullStr Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
title_full_unstemmed Criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
title_sort criminalisation of copyright piracy and international trade : a marriage of convenience? the case with transpacific partnership agreement
publishDate 2016
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/53084/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/53084/1/criminilisation%20complete_53084.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T21:15:09Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T21:15:09Z
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