Oct. 10 – Chicago Daily Law Bulletin
As China’s economy shifts from focusing on providing cheap labor to producing more innovative products, it creates an incentive for the country to back up its long-standing goal to enhance patent rights and enforcement, said Arthur Tan-Chi Yuan, executive director at The John Marshall Law School’s Chinese IP Resource Center.
“The courts notice that and the Chinese population and public know that if they themselves want strong IP protection, they need to respect” the IP rights of other countries, Yuan said.