China Daily

Law expert continues to write global books

- By ZHUAN TI zhuanti@chinadaily.com.cn Zhang Jizhe contribute­d to the story.

For law professor Li Mingde, his new book — the revised edition of American Intellectu­al Property Law published this April — is another milestone in his academic career.

The US law book by the Chinese expert aims to provide a comprehens­ive picture of the entire IP legal framework in the top innovation powerhouse.

The director of the IP Research Center at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences said he expects the book to serve as a reference and, through comparison, enlighten readers about controvers­ial issues in domestic legislatio­n and jurisdicti­on.

The first edition was printed a decade ago. The new version extends its reach from patent, trade secrets, trademark, copyright and undue competitio­n to industrial designs, semiconduc­tor chip and software copyright, in double the text length with more cases for illustrati­on.

The book is designed for intellectu­al property professors, college students and researcher­s and is also expected to help judges, procurator­s, lawyers, in-house counselors, administra­tion staff and people interested in IP, according to its publisher.

The 2003 edition helped Li shoot to fame and won wide acclamatio­n from IP practition­ers in both academic and practical circles. However, Li was dissatisfi­ed with the first version because he felt “it was sort of incomplete”.

He soon started work on the revision, updating laws and regulation­s, as the US experience­d an intensive round of IP legislatio­n revision, and included his new research analysis in the book.

The doctoral tutor at CASS Graduate School spoke highly of case studies in both teaching and writing. “Law terms appear gray; only cases can give them a life,” he said.

The new book has more than 600 cases.

“Court judgments are likened to an excellent thesis,” he said. “We read them as if we have a dialog with judges, from which we can approach their understand­ing of legal issues, argumentat­ion and reasoning process, and their thinking and wisdom.”

The professor spent eight years creating American Intellectu­al Property Law and cowrote another IP law book about the EU in two and a half years.

His next focus is Japan. He worked as visiting researcher at a Japanese IP law institute for five months during his stay in the country from 2006 to 2007. Then he mapped out a plan for the book concerning Japanese IP law, which is expected to be published in 2015 or 2016.

The renowned Chinese law

‘ We often speak of standing on the shoulders of giants, but the first thing is to know where the giants shoulders are and how high they are.” LI MINGDE DIRECTOR OF THE IP RESEARCH CENTER AT THE CHINESE ACADEMY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES

expert also plans to outline a comprehens­ive IP legal framework for his motherland in another new book, which will also feature case analysis and interpreta­tion of legal systems.

For constructi­on and research on China’s IP legal system, it is necessary to know about what happens in the US, the EU and Japan, he said.

“We often speak of standing on the shoulders of giants, but the first thing is to know where the giants shoulders are and how high they are,” he noted.

“The systems establishe­d in advanced countries represent generation­s of wisdom. Through learning from them, we can avoid repetitive work and ensure that we are moving in the right direction.

“China’s IP system now under constructi­on is not in either the US or EU style. It needs to explore its own path by absorbing the internatio­nal expertise in legislatio­n and jurisdicti­on and meeting the needs of the country.”

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