Beyond TRIPS: The Current Push for Greater International Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights - Strengthening IP Enforcement Through TRIPS and Other Multilateral Initiatives Many countries and IP-owning industries that championed the TRIPS Agreement in the 1990s are now unsatisfied with their ability to enforce IP rights. They argue that new technologies have led to new types of copyright infringement that necessitate new norms for enforcement, and point out that infringement of copyrights, patents and trademarks is still widespread. A WTO Panel recently issued what is largely regarded as a split decision in a dispute brought against China by the United States that alleged inadequate enforcement of IP. With the goal of setting new international norms for tougher enforcement, IP-owning industries and developed-country governments have begun negotiating tougher intellectual property norms in a number of fora. The largest enforcement negotiation is the Anticounterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), but there are additional international efforts as well (through the World Health Organization, World Customs Organization, APEC, etc). Critics of the push for stronger IP have complained that the negotiations have been overly secretive, and that it risks upsetting the TRIPS Agreement’s balance between the protection of IP-owners’ and IP-users’ rights. Moderator: Padideh Ala'i, Professor of Law & Acting Director, International Legal Studies Program at American University Washington College of Law Panelists * Daniel Gervais, Professor of Law & Co-Director, Technology and Entertainment Law Program, Vanderbilt University Law School * Peter Yu, Kern Family Chair in Intellectual Property Law & Director, Intellectual Property Law Center, Drake University Law School * Michael Geist, Professor of Law & Canada Research Chair in Internet and E-commerce Law, University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law (Javascript is required to view Mediasite content)