The pressure from the US government on India seems to be working. With India's intellectual property rights (IPR) regime facing flak, and the USA launching an out-of-cycle review of India's IPR regime, the Department of Industrial Policy and Promotion (DIPP) has set up a think-tank to draft a National Intellectual Property Rights Policy. Work is also on to set up IPR courts to fast track cases, reports The Pharma Letter’s India correspondent.
Prabha Sridevan, a former Judge of the Madras High Court, who was also the former chairman of the Intellectual Property Appellate Board, is to lead the think-tank, and help with the formation of the new policy.
“A pressurized Indian government is getting its act together. Through the new policy, India is aiming to brand itself as pro-IP. And by setting up more courts, the government is keen to show that it means business in resolving IPR cases,'' said an official at the DIPP, seeking anonymity.
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