Book Review: Simon Klopschinski and Mary-Rose McGuire, eds. Research Handbook on Intellectual Property Rights and Arbitration - ARIA - Vol. 36, No. 2
Alexandra Desmedt - J.D./M2 Candidate, Columbia Law School & Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne; Head Online Editor, The American Review of International Arbitration.
Originally from The American Review of International Arbitration (ARIA)
PREVIEW
The Research Handbook on Intellectual Property Rights and Arbitration, edited by Simon Klopschinski and Mary-Rose McGuire, addresses a structural tension that has long shaped the enforcement of intellectual property (IP) rights: the coexistence of territorially grounded legal regimes and increasingly transnational patterns of commercial activity. IP rights, though intangible and easily exploited across borders, remain rooted in sovereign acts of recognition and enforcement, whether through statutory regimes, administrative procedures, or domestic courts. At the same time, globalization has transformed IP into a core economic asset in innovation-driven markets, generating disputes that are technically complex, commercially strategic, and frequently multi-jurisdictional.
The fragmentation of IP rights into national bundles complicates jurisdiction, choice of law, and enforcement, often requiring parallel proceedings across multiple fora. While regional instruments and international conventions have sought to mitigate these difficulties, coordination remains costly and imperfect. Against this backdrop, arbitration has increasingly emerged as a procedural mechanism capable of consolidating disputes, accommodating technical expertise, and providing flexible remedies in cross-border IP conflicts. Yet its expansion has been accompanied by persistent concerns grounded in the public-law origins of many IP rights, particularly where arbitral determinations intersect with public regulatory interests.
Klopschinski and McGuire situate the Handbook squarely within this tension, emphasizing that despite the dual character of IP rights as simultaneously private economic assets and products of sovereign authority, a comparative survey of current national practices reveals that several jurisdictions have shifted away from this rigid categorization and accept arbitration for an expanding range of IP disputes. Rather than presenting arbitration as a substitute for state court adjudication, the Handbook advances a theme of institutional complementarity. The question whether to settle an IP dispute before state courts or by arbitration is no longer a simple “either or,” but a matter of complex coordination between courts, arbitral tribunals, and administrative bodies. At the same time, this modularization of IP litigation raises new questions about how these interact, including difficult questions of jurisdiction, recognition, and enforcement. The volume thus rejects a binary opposition between private and public adjudication in favor of a pluralistic approach to contemporary IP dispute resolution.
The Handbook intervenes at an important moment, as specialized arbitral and mediation mechanisms are becoming increasingly institutionalized within IP enforcement structures. Developments such as the establishment of WIPO’s Arbitration and Mediation Center, the incorporation of alternative dispute resolution within the Unified Patent Court framework, and regulatory initiatives encouraging arbitration in SEP and FRAND disputes reflect a growing acceptance of private adjudication as a component of IP governance. Yet these innovations also intensify long-standing legitimacy concerns, particularly where arbitral determinations intersect with public policy, competition law, or the sovereign prerogatives underlying IP rights.
