Gene Cartels
Luigi Palombi
Starting with the thirteenth century, this book explores how patents have been used as an economic protectionist tool, developing and evolving to the point where thousands of patents have been ultimately granted not over inventions, but over isolated or purified biological materials. DNA, invented by no man and once thought to be ‘free to all men and reserved exclusively to none’, has become cartelised in the hands of multinational corporations. The author questions whether the continuing grant of patents can be justified when they are now used to suppress, rather than promote, research and development in the life sciences.
Luigi Palombi demonstrates that patents are about inventions and not isolated biological materials, which consequently have no bona fide purpose in the innovations of biotechnological science. Gene Cartels provides important reading for anyone — particularly historians, economists and scientists — with an interest in the role that patents have played in economic development. It will also be of great interest to law academics, lawyers, judges, and policy-makers.
Luigi Palombi
Luigi Palombi is an expert on biotechnology patents in Australia, the European Union and the United States of America. Luigi holds degrees in law and economics from the University of Adelaide and earned his PhD (The Patenting of Biological Materials in the Context of the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property) from the University of New South Wales. He has been a barrister and solicitor since 1982 and has specialised in intellectual property law since 1986.