Crafting IP law for Africa

23 March 2018 | Story Kate-Lyn Moore. Photo Michael Hammond. Read time 2 min.
Professor Caroline Ncube will deliver her inaugural lecture, titled: “The public interest in intellectual property law: African solutions to global challenges”, on Wednesday, 28 March.
Professor Caroline Ncube will deliver her inaugural lecture, titled: “The public interest in intellectual property law: African solutions to global challenges”, on Wednesday, 28 March.

Society seeks access to knowledge, medicines and culture. How can intellectual property (IP) laws secure such access while protecting private property rights in the creative or inventive outputs of individuals, communities and industry?

In her inaugural lecture, “The public interest in intellectual property law: African solutions to global challenges”, Professor Caroline Ncube will discuss options for crafting laws that comply with international norms while responding to Africa’s developmental context and supporting economic growth in both the formal and informal sectors.

Ncube is a National Research Foundation-rated researcher who has authored more than 70 articles, conference papers and book chapters.

Ncube’s lecture will traverse her work and will speak to recent research projects that seek to understand these IP policy and law options in the African context through various case studies.

This public lecture will be taking place at 17:00 for 17:30 on Wednesday, 28 March, in Lecture Theatre 2 in the Kramer Law Building on middle campus.

To attend, please reply online by 26 March.

For enquiries, please email or phone 021 650 3730 / 4847.


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