The Human Right to a Healthy Environment: What Impact on Intellectual Property Laws?

IViR Workshop

(with the financial support by the University of Amsterdam Law Faculty Research Strategic Investment Fund and the Netherlands Network for Human Rights Research)

Practical details

Date: Wednesday, 4 December 2024
Time: 13:00 – 19:15 CET (Amsterdam)
Place: This event will take place on location and online via Zoom.
Location: IViR Room, REC A5.24, Nieuwe Achtergracht 166, 1018 WV Amsterdam.
Fees: free of charge

Please register for this event below.

Abstract

Current linear market patterns, marked by excessive production and overconsumption, threaten the environment, fueling its degradation. Recognizing this, there is a growing call for environmental awareness, with practices exploring the alternatives to the destruction of goods emerging as hopeful solutions for transitioning to a more just and sustainable economy that respects the fundamental rights of all stakeholders, including the human right to a healthy environment (HR2HE). However, a notable obstacle arises to these aspirations and sustainable practices – intellectual property (IP) protection. Current IP laws frequently diverge from sustainability objectives, hindering the shift away from linear business models. As a result, across jurisdictions, IP holders wield significant power, enabling them to impede sustainable businesses such as repair, refurbishment, or upcycling, or to advocate for unsustainable measures, such as destroying even genuine but parallel-imported goods that are found to infringe on IP rights.

Despite a growing discourse on the negative impact of IP protection on sustainability, there has been a notable absence of in-depth analysis of this issue from a human rights law perspective. This workshop aims to address this gap by examining the intersection of the evolving human right to a healthy environment and IP laws. Recent developments, such as the UN’s recognition of a self-standing HR2HE in its October 2021 Resolution and the 2024 Grand Chamber judgment of the European Court of Human Rights affirming that a country’s failure to uphold its environmental protection commitments constitutes a human rights violation, underscore the urgency of this issue.  The workshop will consist of several sessions, each featuring introductory talks by presenters, followed by discussions with participants. The first session will lay the foundation for applying HR2HE to IP by examining the meaning and scope of this rapidly evolving human right within international, Council of Europe, and EU legal frameworks. The second session will shift to a more specific discussion on the role of environmental human rights in fostering sustainability and building circular economies, thereby smoothly transitioning to the subsequent sessions focused on specific rules of IP protection in Europe and their impact on sustainability. To this effect, the third session will examine the impact of trademark protection on businesses engaged in repair, refurbishment, and upcycling. The fourth session will conduct a similar examination from the copyright law perspective, while the fifth session will analyze substantive patent protection, as well as remedies for IP infringement, from the HR2HE angle. The sixth and final session, featuring one introductory talk followed by an extended open discussion with all workshop speakers and the audience, will explore potential strategies for reconciling the human right to environmental protection with intellectual property laws. It will also address a more substantive question on the role and place of this human right in the broader discussions on IP and sustainability.

Program

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