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Balancing innovation, 'ordre public' and morality in human germline editing : A call for more nuanced approaches in patent law

Matthews, Duncan ; Minssen, Timo LU and Nordberg, Ana LU orcid (2023) p.241-267
Abstract

This chapter analyses the role that 'ordre public' and morality exceptions can play in the granting of patents on inventions in the field of human germline editing and the consequences of this policy option. In order to provide the context for such an analysis, the chapter will, first, provide an overview of the current patent landscape for relevant genome editing technologies, drawing attention to recent patent disputes and, second, examine 'ordre public' and morality exceptions under patent law in international, national and regional law, and the implications for innovation and access to novel treatments. The chapter argues that patent exceptions should not be used as a blunt policy instrument, nor interpreted in a way that is... (More)

This chapter analyses the role that 'ordre public' and morality exceptions can play in the granting of patents on inventions in the field of human germline editing and the consequences of this policy option. In order to provide the context for such an analysis, the chapter will, first, provide an overview of the current patent landscape for relevant genome editing technologies, drawing attention to recent patent disputes and, second, examine 'ordre public' and morality exceptions under patent law in international, national and regional law, and the implications for innovation and access to novel treatments. The chapter argues that patent exceptions should not be used as a blunt policy instrument, nor interpreted in a way that is contrary to the patent system's overall objectives. The 'ordre public' and morality based exceptions in the context of human germline editing should not be interpreted and applied in a way which results in outcomes counterproductive to the goal of balancing innovation with the protection of societal higher normative values. Instead, the application of the exception should be based on a sound understanding of both the underlying science as well as the broader ethical, social, and legal implications, thus enabling case-by-case decisions that provide the basis for patent claim amendments and nuanced purpose-bound protection. Further analysis and debate as to the role that such flexibilities can play in the context of genome editing technologies is therefore both necessary and desirable, and can be facilitated in the ways set out in this chapter.

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Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
CRISPR, Genome editing, Genome editing governance, Law and ethics, Morality exception, Patent law
host publication
Governing, Protecting, and Regulating the Future of Genome Editing : The Significance of ELSPI Perspectives - The Significance of ELSPI Perspectives
pages
27 pages
publisher
Brill
external identifiers
  • scopus:85195248389
ISBN
9789004526082
9789004526136
DOI
10.1163/9789004526136_013
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
63f509dc-16d0-4893-b062-f07fd381a00b
date added to LUP
2024-10-09 11:29:13
date last changed
2024-12-18 18:41:34
@inbook{63f509dc-16d0-4893-b062-f07fd381a00b,
  abstract     = {{<p>This chapter analyses the role that 'ordre public' and morality exceptions can play in the granting of patents on inventions in the field of human germline editing and the consequences of this policy option. In order to provide the context for such an analysis, the chapter will, first, provide an overview of the current patent landscape for relevant genome editing technologies, drawing attention to recent patent disputes and, second, examine 'ordre public' and morality exceptions under patent law in international, national and regional law, and the implications for innovation and access to novel treatments. The chapter argues that patent exceptions should not be used as a blunt policy instrument, nor interpreted in a way that is contrary to the patent system's overall objectives. The 'ordre public' and morality based exceptions in the context of human germline editing should not be interpreted and applied in a way which results in outcomes counterproductive to the goal of balancing innovation with the protection of societal higher normative values. Instead, the application of the exception should be based on a sound understanding of both the underlying science as well as the broader ethical, social, and legal implications, thus enabling case-by-case decisions that provide the basis for patent claim amendments and nuanced purpose-bound protection. Further analysis and debate as to the role that such flexibilities can play in the context of genome editing technologies is therefore both necessary and desirable, and can be facilitated in the ways set out in this chapter.</p>}},
  author       = {{Matthews, Duncan and Minssen, Timo and Nordberg, Ana}},
  booktitle    = {{Governing, Protecting, and Regulating the Future of Genome Editing : The Significance of ELSPI Perspectives}},
  isbn         = {{9789004526082}},
  keywords     = {{CRISPR; Genome editing; Genome editing governance; Law and ethics; Morality exception; Patent law}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  month        = {{03}},
  pages        = {{241--267}},
  publisher    = {{Brill}},
  title        = {{Balancing innovation, 'ordre public' and morality in human germline editing : A call for more nuanced approaches in patent law}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/9789004526136_013}},
  doi          = {{10.1163/9789004526136_013}},
  year         = {{2023}},
}