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DONG, TSE-PING (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   107321


Cross-Strait judicial agreement: a study of bilateral agreements regarding trade and investment matters in China / Sung, Chun-Hsien; Dong, Tse-Ping; Lin, Shang-Chen Justin; Wei, Tzu-Wen   Journal Article
Dong, Tse-Ping Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The third round of talks between Chiang Pin-kung (???) chairman of Taiwan's Straits Exchange Foundation, and Chen Yunlin (???), president of China's Association for Relations Across the Taiwan Strait, established an institutionalized platform for legal cooperation by concluding the Agreement on Joint Cross-Strait Crime-fighting and Mutual Judicial Assistance (hereafter, the Cross-Strait Judicial Agreement). This study will focus on Article 10 of the Cross-Strait Judicial Agreement, which contains the only reference in international law to Taiwan's and China's responsibility to recognize arbitration awards. This article will examine international rules for recognizing judgments and will make reference to other similar agreements in China that provide models for a future agreement with Taiwan. It is concluded that the form of Article 10 of the Cross-Strait Judicial Agreement can only be regarded as a first step toward judicial cooperation. A further and detailed bilateral agreement would provide safeguards for this preferential treatment. The need to avoid controversy cannot be used as an excuse for ignoring certain important matters.
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2
ID:   105117


Exuberance or bubble: study of nano-based herbal medicine patents in the PR China / Dong, Tse-Ping; Sung, Chun-Hsien   Journal Article
Dong, Tse-Ping Journal Article
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Publication 2011.
Summary/Abstract The growing economic and therapeutic importance of Chinese herbal medicine (CHM) has prompted the governments of East Asian countries to develop it into an industry. The current research on the application of nanotechnology in CHM is deemed a new field of study. This article focuses on the issue of overly broad patent applications and assignments in the PR China by examining a case in which a patentee successfully registered more than 900 nano-based CHM patents in China's State Intellectual Property Office (SIPO), all of which were based on the same preparation process. This article further shows that the proliferation of nano-based CHM patents in China is due to the illusion of biomedical technological progress and that the current irrational exuberance for patents not only is a bubble that will burst, but also presents barriers to innovation and invention in the emerging biopharmaceutical ind ustry and the nano-based CHM market.
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