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期刊名称:ASIA PACIFIC LAW REVIEW

ISSN:1019-2557
出版频率:Semi-annual
出版社:TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD, 2-4 PARK SQUARE, MILTON PARK, ABINGDON, England, OXON, OX14 4RN
  出版社网址:http://www.law.murdoch.edu.au/research/apipli.html
期刊网址:http://www.law.murdoch.edu.au/research/apipli.html
影响因子: 0.542 (2020年) 0.400(2018年) 0.450(2017年) 0.083(2016年) 0.111(2015年) 0.080(2014年) 0.04(2013年) 0.100 (2012年)
主题范畴:LAW;    CHINA'JOURNALS

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

The Asia Pacific Law Review, a journal of the School of Law (SLW) at City University of Hong Kong (CityU), has become the first Asia-based law journal to be included in the Social Science Citation Index (SSCI), the world-renowned database of Thomson Scientific. The recognition reinforces the reputation of the School, as well as CityU as an international institution.

 

Thomson Scientific wrote: ?I style="mso-bidi-font-style: normal">Asia Pacific Law Review is a well-produced law journal covering the Asia Pacific region. Although selection criteria for a regional journal are fundamentally the same as for an international journal, the importance of a regional journal is measured in terms of the specificity of its content rather than in its citation impact. Asia Pacific Law Review is an excellent resource for Asia Pacific legal studies.?

 

SSCI adopts stringent criteria in evaluating journals. It evaluates journal’s editorial content, takes into account the international spread of contributors and conducts a citation analysis.

 

Asia Pacific Law Review joins the SSCI’s league of leading law journals that includes Harvard Law Review, Yale Law Journal, Stanford Journal of International Law, UCLA Law Review and American Journal of Comparative Law. It is also indexed/abstracted in several other sources, such as the Index to Legal Periodicals and Books. 


Instructions to Authors

The Institute is available to perform consultancy services for industry and government and within the University community. In this regard, the Institute has prepared advices for both State and Federal Government authorities on Intellectual Property policy as well as consulting with the commercial and legal sectors in a number of countries in the Asia Pacific Region.

Selection of publications by APIPLI members:

  1. Michael D Pendleton, as a member of the Crown Copyright, Final Report (2005)
  2. Michael D Pendleton, "The Copyright Balance", Keynote address at 'Unlocking IP Conference', Baker & McKenzie Cyber Law Centre, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Law, 24 November 2004
  3. Michael D Pendleton, "Intellectual property & the Public Domain", Paper at 'Unlocking IP Conference, Baker & McKenzie Cyber Law Centre, University of New South Wales, Faculty of Law, 24 November 2004
  4. Michael D Pendleton, "Construe Widely and Face Invalidity - Construe Narrowly and Miss Infringements: the Dilemma of Interpreting Patent Specifications" (2004) E Law Journal, November 2004
  5. Spalding, Darren "Culpable Copying: The Criminal Offence Provisions of the Copyright Act 1968 (Cth)" (2003) 54 Intellectual Property Forum
  6. Michel D Pendleton as a member of the Copyright Law Review Committee "Copyright & Contract" (2003) Final Report
  7. C Kendall and L McNamara, "Piracy and the Copyright Act: Criminal Deterrent or Slap on the Wrist?" (2002) 13(3) Australian Intellectual Property Journal 121-145
  8. A McRobert, "Breach of Confidence: Revisiting the Protection of Surreptitiously Obtained Information" (2002) 13(2) Australian Intellectual Property Journal 69
  9. A McRobert & C Hewitt, "GateKeepers & Watchdogs: Advertising Agencies and misleading advertising" Campaign Brief (December 2002)
  10. Prof. Meyers & R Malcolm, "Native Title Rights and the Protection of Indigenous Cultural Knowledge" 50 IP Forum (September 2002)
  11. A McRobert, "Case Comment: AVRA v Warner Home Video Pty Ltd [2001] FCA 1719" 49 IP Forum (June 2002)
  12. C Kendall and J Curthoys, "Ambush Marketing and the Sydney 2000 Games: A Retrospective" (2001) 8(2) Elaw - Murdoch University Electronic Journal of Law, at http://www.murdoch.edu.au/elaw/issues/v8n2/kendall82.html
  13. A McRobert, "Digital Music & Copyright: Third Party Liability & Home Taping" (2001) 3(1) Digital Technology Law Journal
  14. P Sadler, National Security and the D-Notice System (2001, Ashgate: UK)
  15. P Sadler and R Guthrie, "Sports Injuries and the Right to Damages", (2001) 3 Legal Issues in Business, 3
  16. P Sadler, "Character Merchandising and the Sporting Industry" (2001) 3 Legal Issues in Business, 57
  17. C Kendall, "Internet Censorship in Australia: The Broadcasting Services Amendment Act", (2000) 1 Ciberspazio e Diritto, 175-184
  18. C Kendall, "Running Rings Around the Sponsors: The Sydney Olympics and Ambush Marketing" (2000) 11(1) Australian Intellectual Property Journal, 5-22
  19. A McRobert & M Pendleton, "Browsing, Downloading, Caching & Linking Websites: Copyright & Multi-Jurisdictional Dimensions" (2000) Computers & Law 1
  20. P Sadler and F Harman, "Reform of Freedom of Information Legislation in Western Australia" (2000) 6(2) The Journal of Contemporary Issues in Business & Government, 15
  21. G Meyers, "The UN Biodiversity Convention, Biotechnology and Intellectual Property Rights" in (1999/2000) 4(3) Bioscience Law Review, 131
  22. Kendall, C, "Australia's New Internet Censorship Regime: Is This Progress?" (1999) 3 Digital Technology Law Journal
  23. P Sadler, "Breach of Confidence in the Mining Industry" (1999) 1 Legal Issues in Business, 27

Editorial Board
Professor Michael Pendleton
Foundation Director

Michael Pendleton is a Professor of Law at Murdoch University. Prof Pendleton has written eight books published by major international publishers and over 100 articles and other publications. In a review of Prof Pendleton's 1984 book Law of Intellectual and Industrial Property in Hong Kong, the late Dr Steven Stewart QC, Director of the Common Law Institute for Intellectual Property in London described it as only the second anywhere in the world on intellectual property in the modern unified sense of the word and concept. Much of this book is about making the case for the contemporary holistic conception of intellectual property rather than the disparate causes of action which in the past existed as “stand alone?areas of law, eg patent or copyright. Prof Pendleton's 1984 book on Hong Kong's intellectual property law was submitted by the American Chamber of Commerce in Hong Kong as an annex to their 1986 submissions to the President of the United States of America on renewal of Hong Kong's Most Favoured Nation (MFN) status under the Generalised System of Preferences (GSP). Prof Pendleton's most recent of eight books is Intellectual Property ?a guide to the law in Hong Kong with reference to developments in China, co-authored with Alice Lee of Hong Kong University Law Faculty and published in 2001 by Butterworths. One of Prof Pendleton's articles, “Intellectual Property, Information Based Society and a New International Economic Order ?the Policy Options?is widely cited in most texts, case books and indeed in a leading court judgement (Pacific Hogan v Dunlop, the Crocodile Dundee case) by Justice Gummow (presently of the High Court of Australia) in connection with the concept and justification for intellectual property. Much of Prof Pendleton's work concerns intellectual property law in Hong Kong and China. He taught, practised law and published for ten years in Hong Kong, one of the world's leading jurisdictions for intellectual property law. One of Prof Pendleton's closest friends and co-authors for over 18 years is Professor Zheng Chengsi, Director of the Intellectual Property Law Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing (one of the Chinese Government's foremost policy formation units) and member of the National People's Congress. Prof Zheng is also China's State Council appointed sole National Expert on Intellectual Property. With Prof Zheng, Prof Pendleton wrote a book on China's Copyright Law in 1991 for CCH and an earlier text on Chinese intellectual property in 1987 for Sweet & Maxwell. They have written many articles and conference papers together.

Prof Pendleton was appointed by the Governor of Western Australia as a member, then Chairman of the Law Reform Commission of Western Australia between 1992-1994. He taught at the Faculty of Law of the University of Sydney between 1976-79 and was Senior Lecturer in Law in the Faculty of Law, University of Hong Kong (1980-1999). He practised as a solicitor with Bartier Perry & Purcell, Sydney, Bird & Bird, London, Deacons, Hong Kong (Deacons was founded in Hong Kong by Mr Deacon in the 1890s and is the forerunner of various practices of this name around the world) and Blake Dawson Waldron in Australia. He was appointed by the Australian Prime Minister as a member of the Copyright Law Review Committee and a Mediator & Arbitrator of the World Intellectual Property Organisation (WIPO) Arbitration and Mediation Centre, Geneva.


Dr Pauline Sadler
Deputy Director
LLB (Hons) (University College London) PhD (Murdoch)

Dr Pauline Sadler is a Senior Lecturer in the School of Business at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Western Australia.

Dr Sadler teaches primarily in the area of intellectual property law and her doctoral thesis centred on breach of confidence and copyright. She is presently the academic representative on the Curtin University Intellectual Property Committee.


Professor Gary Meyers
Principal Researcher &
Professorial Advisor
BA(cum laude)(USC) JD (Lewis&Clark) LLM (Penn)
Prof Meyers is Professor of Law at Murdoch University and Director of the Law School's Indigenous Lands: Rights, Governance and Environmental Management Project. Prior to this appointment he was Associate Professor of Law (1996-2001) and Senior Lecturer in Law (1994-1996). He was Associate Dean/Research (1999-2001), Chair of the LLM and Postgraduate Studies Programs (2000-2001) and Foundation Director of the Murdoch University Environmental Law & Policy Centre (1994-1996). From 1999-2001 he was a Senior Research Fellow with APIPLI. Before coming to Murdoch, Prof Meyers was Assistant Dean/Director of the Environmental Law Program at Lewis & Clark Law School in Portland, Oregon and an Adjunct Professor of Law at the Law School. He has consulted widely with government and Indigenous groups. From 1995-97 he was the inaugural Director of the National Native Title Tribunal Legal Research Unit and in 1996 was Acting Director of the Tribunal's Research Division.

Professor Meyers' primary teaching and research interests are in environmental and natural resources law, international environmental law, indigenous land and resources rights, and the interaction of biodiversity protection regimes and land rights regimes with intellectual property rights protection. He has written widely on Indigenous land rights issues, particularly on comparative land and resource management rights. He is co-author (with, Malcolm O'Dell, Guy Wright, and Simone Muller) of A Sea Change in Land Rights Law: The Extension of Native Title to Australia's Offshore Areas (Australian Institute for Aboriginal and Torres Straight Islander Studies, Native Title Research Unit, 1997); and his most recent book is: Indigenous Peoples and Governance Structures: A Comparative Analysis of Land and Resource Management Rights (Aboriginal Studies Press, 2002), co-authored with Professor Garth Nettheim and Associate Professor Donna Craig.



Mr Andrew McRobert
Senior Research Fellow
B.Sc.(Comp. Sci.) LLB LLM

Andrew McRobert is a solicitor whose practice and legal research specialises in the protection and commercialisation of all aspects of intellectual property, including patent, design and trade marks, copyright and confidential information, licensing, manufacturing and distribution arrangements, technology development agreements, franchising, computer law, media and advertising law.

He advises with respect to all forms of information technology issues and contracts including computer systems, hardware and software development and supply contracts, software licensing, electronic data interchange and electronic commerce litigation. Also provides assistance to other business units in relation to intellectual property litigation. Mr McRobert previously worked as a systems administrator (Windows NT and Linux) and Web programmer (PHP, PostgreSQL, Perl etc). He has lectured in intellectual property at postgraduate level in the School of Law.

Ms Louisa Case
Senior Research Fellow
DipCompProg BSc.(Murdoch) LLB(Hons) (Murdoch) GradDipIP (Melb) MBA (Murdoch & USC)
Ms Case is a Solicitor, Commercial and Intellectual Property, with the Legal Services Office, The University of Western Australia. This position entails advising on all areas of general commercial and intellectual property law and involves working with all University departments and centres including acting as Solicitor to the Perth International Arts Festival. The position involves intellectual property work in the following areas: intellectual property related licensing and assignments; confidentiality agreements; material transfer and plant breeders rights agreements; medical research and development agreements; commercialisation agreements involving various forms of IP ownership and revenue sharing; software licensing, development and outsourcing agreements etc. Ms Case has recently been appointed as Legal Advisor to the Human Research and Ethics Committee of Edith Cowan University for a term of 3 years. Ms Case has previously worked as a solicitor in the intellectual property and information technology arena with Arthur Robinson & Hedderwicks (Melbourne), Jackson McDonald (Perth) and Blakiston & Crabb (Perth). She has also worked in commercial litigation with Blake Dawson Waldron (Perth) and as Senior Solicitor, Commercial and Intellectual Property, for the Director of Public Transport (Victoria).

Mr Darren Spalding
Research Fellow
LLB(Hons) (Murdoch), BCom (UWA), DipEd (ECU)
Darren Spalding is a graduate of the Murdoch School of Law.  Between 2003 and 2005, Mr Spalding was a solicitor at Mallesons Stephen Jaques.  During that time, he worked on contentious intellectual property matters involving copyright infringement, patent licensing and trade mark disputes.  He has also provided advice on non-contentious matters including trade mark registration, use of copyright materials and the protection of confidential information.  Mr Spalding is now practising as a solicitor at Herbert Smith in London.


Mr Andrew Fuller
Research Fellow
LLB (Hons)(Murdoch),  BA (UWA)
Andrew Fuller graduated from the Murdoch University School of Law in 2002 and is currently practising with Allens Arthur Robinson in Melbourne. Mr Fuller has  worked on a number of contentious intellectual property matters involving copyright and patent infringement as well as trade mark disputes, particularly in the area of anti-counterfeiting and ambush marketing .  In addition, he has worked on domain name disputes decided under the UDRP including a dispute administered by the WIPO Mediation and Arbitration Centre for the Melbourne 2006 Commonwealth Games Corporation.  Mr Fuller has also provided advice on non-contentious matters including trade mark registration, use of copyright materials, employees' moral rights, the copyright/design overlap provisions of the Copyright Act and the protection of confidential information.

Editorial Staff


Editor in Chief

John Donovan

Executive Editor

Rebecca Anderson

Managing Editor

Marissa L.L. Lum

Outside Articles Editors

Scott Bullock

Christine Prepose

Comments Editor

Andrew Park

Staff Editors

Catherine Cachero

Everett Ohta

Doris Tam

Angela Thompson

Faculty Advisors

Ronald Brown

Lawrence Foster

Mark Levin

Melody MacKenzie

Volume 9, Issue 2


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