Intellectual Property Law and Food Security
Events

Technology and the Future of the Legal Profession Lecture Series

Demystifying Artificial Intelligence: What Lawyers Really Need to Know About Technology

29 August 2019 6:00pm7:00pm
The automation of various aspects of legal services delivery, from discovery and due diligence to predictive analytics, have raised questions for university and continuing legal education. To work effectively alongside technology, lawyers will need to understand it, not by learning to code, but by grasping the underlying logics.
Biology

The social, legal and regulatory challenges of synthetic biology workshop

13 February 2019 2:00pm5:00pm
This workshop will explore some of the key challenges that synthetic biology poses for national and international regulatory frameworks, and consider possible solutions.

Intangible Machines: A History of Patent Protection for Computer Programs

3 August 2018 12:00pm1:00pm
Professor Brad Sherman on patent law and software.

Reimagining IP Law

26 April 2018 6:00pm8:00pm
Presenter: Ms Jocelyn Bosse, PhD student at the TC Beirne School of Law and a former Treasurer of ALPSA
CRISPR Gene Editing Technologies

CRISPR Gene Editing Technologies: The legal, ethical, and social implications Colloquium

18 September 2017 5:00pm7:00pm
Professor Jimmy Botella, School of Agriculture, the University of Queensland, Assistant Professor Ben Hurlbut, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, and Associate Professor Ainsley Newson, Centre for Values, Ethics and the Law in Medicine, University of Sydney
Reimagining the Governance of Genetic Resources and Intellectual Property for Agriculture and Food Security in Asia

Reimagining the Governance of Genetic Resources and Intellectual Property for Agriculture and Food Security in Asia

2 August 2017 9:00am3 August 2017 5:00pm
Dr Kamalesh Adhikari and David Jefferson, workshop co-convenors.
Food Security

Attribution, Intellectual Property, and Making Claims to Nature Panel

17 November 2016 1:45pm4:00pm
Organised by Susannah M Chapman (University of Queensland) and Tad Brown (University of Georgia, Athens).