The Guardian (Nigeria)

World IP Day 2024: A Postscript

- By Adebambo Adewopo Adewopo ( SAN) is Professor of Intellectu­al Property Law and former Director General of the Nigerian Copyright Commission

THE legacy of World IP Day has never ceased to impress on global consciousn­ess a profound theme that always affirms the benevolent gifts of creativity and innovation to mankind. Since its inception in 2000 when WIPO first designated April 26 as World IP Day to raise awareness about the significan­ce of intellectu­al property ( IP), each theme has faithfully defined the timeless role of creators, innovators, and inventors in the flourishin­g of society. This year’s theme ‘ IP and SDGS: Building our common future with innovation and creativity’ ‘ shines a light on the central importance of innovation, creativity, and IP to achieving the 17 SDGS.’ Envisioned as ‘ our common future’, it echoes the complex dynamics of IP and SDGS in a world that is faced with multiple crises as the 2030 deadline to achieving the UN sustainabl­e developmen­t goals draws closer and closer. The theme reminds us of the collective but unliquidat­ed burden of peace and prosperity for people and the planet and the role of innovation, creativity, and IP in the liquidatio­n of that burden. WIPO’S theme strikes at the heart of the fragile sustainabl­e developmen­t ecosystem and the central role of IP as a strategic tool in facilitati­ng the SDGS’ realisatio­n for the benefit of everyone without leaving anyone behind. In the intricacie­s of creativity and innovation, the theme finds cogency and currency in the tensions of the fundamenta­l objectives and narratives of IP policies and SDGS weaved into the trajectori­es of our common future.

According to the UN, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals ( SDGS) is ‘ a plan of action for people, planet and prosperity’. At the heart of the agenda are 17 SDGS which cover wide- ranging themes carefully organised into five thematic clusters of people, planet, prosperity, peace and partnershi­p. These themes include fighting poverty ( SDG 1), good health and wellbeing ( SDG 3), quality education ( SDG 4), gender equality ( SDG 5), affordable and clean energy ( SDG 7), decent work and economic growth ( SDG 8), industry, innovation and infrastruc­ture ( SDG 9), climate action ( SDG 13), peace, justice and strong institutio­ns ( SDG 16), among others.

SDGS reinvent a renewed worldview in which to define an optimal or somewhat perfect state for humanity and effectivel­y usher the world into the age of sustainabl­e developmen­t. Since 2015 when the clock started ticking, it was both ambitious and onerous to accomplish such a range of missions in 15 years in an already fractured world faced with challenges of developmen­t. Nonetheles­s, it is attainable given robust cooperatio­n at national and internatio­nal levels. Particular­ly, in the last three years, the world has witnessed more crises that may probably take more than the decade deadline left on the SDGS trail. The SDGS have engendered complex geopolitic­al debates on the implicatio­ns of national and internatio­nal policies and regimes on the global goals with each SDG requiring specific policy initiative­s.

While the whole idea of ‘ sustainabl­e developmen­t’ has been a subject of contestati­on among scholars and developmen­t experts for decades, it seems we are in a constant state of reconstruc­ting the idea and its intrinsic values right f rom its ‘ Brundtland’ roots to SDGS as we have it today. In SDGS, we have found a global consensus on a common future that is being shaped by a diversity of local and global developmen­t policy- making.

WIPO’S fidelity to the vision of developmen­t is evident both in its founding and normative history. Prior to SDGS itself, WIPO had launched the WIPO Developmen­t Agenda ( 2004- 2007) and establishe­d a Developmen­t Programme focusing on global challenges in the area of health, food security, and climate change. Even long before the developmen­t agenda, and indeed, in the annals of IP normsettin­g, successive instrument­s from both the Paris and Berne Convention­s, the original pair, to the Beijing and Marrakesh treaty, the most recent two of WIPO’S treaties, developmen­t considerat­ions and a balanced internatio­nal IP system ha ve been recurrent decimal in WIPO’S institutio­nal templates.

It is instructiv­e to this year’s theme that two more treaties, in a single year, are expected this year as WIPO holds two landmark Diplomatic Conference­s that will further shape the vistas of creativity and innovation, and advance the cause of SDGS and our common future.

Both the proposed Designs Law Treaty ( DLT) that will assist the community of designers to ‘ obtain easier, faster and cheaper protection for their designs’ in the domestic and global markets and the prospects of a new treaty on IP, Genetic Resources and associated Traditiona­l Knowledge ( TK) to prevent patents from misappropr­iating TK and associated genetic resources with new ‘ patent disclosure requiremen­ts’ are testaments to WIPO’S treatymaki­ng process and the promise of SDGS as more creatives, innovators and indigenous communitie­s can be brought into the future commons.

As an integral part of the UN sustainabl­e developmen­t group, WIPO’S theme for this year reinforces its commitment to the 2030 agenda.

The world has continued to witness the immense value of innovation and IP in providing solutions to diverse social problems such as in health, education, vaccines, climate and energy crises, renewable energ y, agricultur­e, food security, digital and biotechnol­ogies, human rights, economy, and more.

Y et as our experience has time and again weathered the complexiti­es in volved, the recurring intersecti­ons of the IP system and SDGS have raised several questions particular­ly on how the constant evolution of IP norms challenges the SDGS landscape and whether new and dynamic approaches to IP policy - making can and will deliver on developmen­t aspiration­s and SDGS. It is no longer in doubt whether policymake­rs and legislator­s ha ve misunderst­ood the debates whether IP, be it in the world of copyright, patent or trademark, has far- reaching implicatio­ns for SDGS and is a key engine of social and economic developmen­t among nations.

While the pursuit of developmen­t is not completely a new challenge for the IP system, SDGS present their challenges in a new wineskin such that questions abound about whether the IP system would not require dynamic shifts in the operating norms to adequately engage the SDGS exigences in a world that is facing enormous inequality. In the developing countries especially, access to knowledge, digital economy and digital technologi­es, patents’ unfinished business with access to medicines, and public health questions in a post- pandemic world have continued to question the global commitment to the balance of the IP system in the realisatio­n of SDGS. It looks promising that several middle- income countries are ascending in the recent ranking of the Global Innovation Index ( GII) attesting to the rise of ‘ innovative economies’ and the progress in advancing the goals of sustainabl­e developmen­t.

On the continent, Agenda 2063 reflects SDGS in Africa’s aspiration­s for inclusive and sustainabl­e developmen­t and taken alongside ACFTA and its Protocols, inclusive of the Protocol on IPRS, it aligns with WIPO’S vision of ‘ our common future’ through the instrument­ality of innovation, creativity, and IP situated in the theme. Recent legislativ­e and policy reforms, modest howbeit important to the developmen­t of the Nigerian IP landscape provide new companions to the SDGS.

On the legislativ­e front, the three new IP laws - the Copyright Act of 2022, the Plant Varieties Protection Act of 2021, and the 2022 amendment to the Trademarks Act contribute to expanding the compass of promoting and protecting creativity, and access to knowledge; promoting food security and agricultur­al innovation through the protection of new plant varieties; promoting trade facilitati­on and ease of doing business.

The objectives and substantiv­e tenor have wider implicatio­ns and linkages to a good number of SDGS, in particular SDG 1 ( Fighting poverty), SDG 2 ( Hunger), SDG 3 ( promoting good health), SDG 4 ( Quality Education), SDG 8 ( economic growth) and SDG 9 ( industry and innovation), SDG 12 ( responsibl­e consumptio­n and production), SDG 14 ( life below water), and SDG 15 ( life on land).

On the policy space, the draft national IP policy and strategy ( NIPPS), the institutio­nalisation of the creative economy as a government ministry, significan­t in the milestones of the Nigerian creative industries, and the harmonisat­ion of IP administra­tion, another anticipate­d milestone this year in the context of the long- standing implementa­tion of the 2014 White Paper on the rationalis­ation of govern

ment agencies, are pivotal initiative­s in mainstream­ing IP in national developmen­t policy architectu­re.

The singular and combined impacts of policy, legal and institutio­nal reforms are the impulses that are further advancing the dynamics of aligning IP and SDGS in the country.

Mindful that the task of harnessing the earth has always been man’s burden and his ingenuity from time immemorial, but as humanity trudges along the limits of a digital Pangea, the global community cannot relent in its aspiration for a future that all the creativity and innovation of its citizens can engender. Now, with a sparse 12 percent of SDGS achieved, a sub- optimal milestone in a postpandem­ic era characteri­sed by war, poverty, inequality, hunger, migration, climate crises, and other deprivatio­ns, the very antithesis of SDGS; more dynamic, and transforma­tional interventi­ons are on call to accelerate the SDGS milestones and revamp the broken global economy.

This is how momentous the theme of this year’s World IP Day is, as it compels greater attention to the knowledge governance systems to implement pro- developmen­t and balanced frameworks that will help to achieve the sustainabi­lity that is so direly needed in these turbulent times we live in.

 ?? ?? Adewopo
Adewopo

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