
The Future of IP: Stimulating Creativity and Inclusivity
Liber Amicorum Geertrui Van Overwalle

This celebratory volume honours the remarkable career and intellectual legacy of Professor Dr. Geertrui Van Overwalle, an influential scholar in patent law and plant breeders’ rights. For more than four decades, Van Overwalle has questioned conventions, supported inclusivity, openness, and the public interest. In addition, she has upheld rigorous academic standards and strongly defended academic integrity.
Spanning 25 contributions from leading academics and practitioners across the globe, The Future of IP: Stimulating Creativity and Inclusivity explores how intellectual property (IP) law can respond to today’s pressing challenges, from foundational questions of inclusivity, openness, and access to knowledge to sustainability, biotech innovation, patent law and policy interpretation, and digital transformation.
Structured around six thematic parts and enriched with peculiar inventions drawn from Jacques Carelman’s Catalog of Fantastic Things – each selected and reimagined by the contributors – this Liber Amicorum offers both a scholarly and deeply personal tribute. It invites readers to see IP not as a closed system, but as a framework that can be shaped to promote creativity, openness, inclusivity, equity, and public interest – priorities and values that Van Overwalle has consistently advanced throughout her career.
Digital version available on :
- Strada lex Belgium
- Strada lex Europa
You have a subscription? Activate the digital version for free with the code in the book.
Type of product | Book |
---|---|
Format | Hardback |
EAN / ISSN | 9781839705953 |
Series name | KU Leuven Centre for IT & IP Law Series |
Weight | 600 g |
Status | Forthcoming |
Access to exercice | No |
Publisher | Larcier |
Language | English |
Publication Date | Aug 27, 2025 |
Available on Strada Belgique | Yes |
Available on Strada Europe | Yes |
Available on Strada Luxembourg | No |
Downloads
- Table of contents and preliminary pages
- Introduction. The Future of IP, Liber Amicorum Geertrui Van Overwalle
Arina Gorbatyuk, Amandine Léonard, Esther van Zimmeren - PART I. BACK TO THE FUTURE: INCLUSIVITY AND OPENNESS
- Chapter 1. Inclusive (Intellectual) Properties
Séverine Dusollier - Chapter 2. The ‘Inclusive Patent’ (Invented by Geertrui Van Overwalle): Is it the Opposite of an Exclusive Patent?
Reto M. Hilty, Gregor Rauch - Chapter 3. Open Innovation and Intellectual Property: How Open are ‘Open Innovation’ Agreements?
Arina Gorbatyuk - Chapter 4. Use and Disclosure of Marine Genetic Resources of Areas Beyond National Jurisdiction: A Role for the ‘Inclusive Patent’?
Amandine Léonard - Chapter 5. Inclusivity, Intellectual Property, and the IP Academy
Pascale Chapdelaine - PART II. UNFOLDING THE FUTURE: SUSTAINABILITY AND IP
- Chapter 6. Write-A-Bike: Intellectual Property and the Sustainable Development Goals
Margaret Chon - Chapter 7. A ‘Right to Repair’ in European Patent Law?
Ansgar Ohly - Chapter 8. The Right to Repair and to Reuse Patented Products in a Circular Economy: ‘It’s Time to Get Exhausted’
Jens Schovsbo, Thomas Riis, Timo Minssen - Chapter 9. Unfolding Scenarios for the Future(s) of Intellectual Property Systems
Esther van Zimmeren - PART III. EDITING THE FUTURE: BIOTECH AND AGRICULTURE
- Chapter 10. Accommodating Farmers-Breeders’ Access to Breeding Materials in IP and ABS Regime for Inclusive Innovation
Saurav Ghimire, Christine Frison - Chapter 11. Genome Editing: Biotech at a New Legal Crossroads
Christine Godt - Chapter 12. Protecting Swiss Knives and Plant Varieties
Niels Louwaars - PART IV. UNLOCKING THE FUTURE: SCIENCE, KNOWLEDGE AND BIOLOGICAL MATERIALS
- Chapter 13. Science in the Garden of Midnight
Peter Drahos - Chapter 14. Reverse Engineering and its Limits: Lessons from the Nostalgia Clock
Rochelle C. Dreyfuss - Chapter 15. Patenting Humans
Dianne Nicol - Chapter 16. Unlocking Our Common Body? Biological Materials, Data and Knowledge Commons for Research & Development
Enrique Santamaría Echeverría, Tine de Moor - Chapter 17. What if Invention Already Happened? Reactionary vs Ingenuity Bike
Lodewijk Van Dycke - PART V. INTERPRETING THE FUTURE: PATENT LANGUAGE, POLICY AND PROCEDURE
- Chapter 18. Semiotic Translation in Patent Claims
Dan L. Burk - Chapter 19. (Ir)Rationality in Patent Law
Daria Kim - Chapter 20. Double Patenting: A Sensible Approach or Abuse of Proceedings?
Liesbet Paemen - Chapter 21. Protective Letters: To Be or Not to Be?
Carina Gommers - Chapter 22. Reinventing Patents
Catalina Martinez - PART VI. DIGITISING THE FUTURE: COPYRIGHT, LABOR, AND DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES
- Chapter 23. Flexibilisation and Digitalisation of Work: Finding a New Income Paradigm for the Financing of Social Security
Paul Schoukens, Eleni De Becker - Chapter 24. Be Your Own String Quartet? A Plea for the Legal Revaluation of Musical Performances
Jozefien Vanherpe - Chapter 25. Regulating IP Exclusion/Inclusion on a Global Scale: The Example of Copyright vs. AI Training
Alexander Peukert