The New Frontier: Country Brands and their Legal Status under Australian Trade Mark Law

Title
The New Frontier: Country Brands and their Legal Status under Australian Trade Mark Law
Publication Date
2009
Author(s)
Forrest, Heather
Type of document
Journal Article
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Lawbook Co
Place of publication
Australia
UNE publication id
une:5599
Abstract
This article asks two inter-related but separate questions: first, whether a country can be a brand and second, whether Australian law recognises and protects private property rights in so-called "country brands" as trade marks. In order to answer the former, the broad concept of a brand must first be explored in an analysis of representative views from the perspective of each broad group involved in the branded environment. These are then evaluated against the notion of the country brand. Having determined that the relevant question is not whether but how country brands achieve legal status through recognition as trade marks, the criteria for registration of a trade mark are then discussed. These criteria are applied to country brands along with a consideration of other related legal issues faced by applicants of trade marks constituting country names. The relatively few registered trade marks solely constituting country names without other accompanying words or images brands on the Australian register support a conclusion that although registration is now possible, significant obstacles remain.
Link
Citation
Australian Intellectual Property Journal, 20(3), p. 127-147
ISSN
1038-1635
Start page
127
End page
147

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