Combat Law : The Human Rights magazine
Volume 4, Issue 2: Patents

  • Amended Patents Act: A critique
    India's recent position on patents means that it is going to make its products extremely expensive and out of reach for its own people and their brethren within the developing world. B K Keayla critiques the direction the Indian government is taking with the new patent laws.

  • East is not west
    V G Hegde

  • Big players and our national interests
    Dinesh Abrol

  • Getting in tune
    Vivek Sharma, H S Oberoi, and N Raghuram

  • Patents versus patients
    Kavita Krishnan

  • Tripped!
    Bharat Dogra

  • An open minefield
    Shalini Bhutani

  • Grandmom shackled
    L Pushpakumar

  • Magic seeds
    Harsh Dobhal

  • Einstein for beginners
    S Srinivasan

  • Lingo, lingo, lingo
    Ravi Ramesh Pathak

  • Traditional knowledge, or capitalist goldmine?
    Ankur Gupta

  • Beyond greed and profit
    D G Shah

  • Life on the edge
    Krishna Pandey Vishwajeet

  • It's not in the genes
    Suman Sahai

  • Madness and civilisation
    Rukmini Pillai

FEATURES

  • GATT it? Got it.
    Krishna Bir Chaudhary

  • Missing the woods for trees
    Shankar Gopalkrishnan

  • POTA: Farce and facts
    Harsh Dobhal

  • The model nikahnamah
    Yoginder Sikand

  • Debate: Moral cops run amok
    Vijay Hiremath and Pratibha Menon

  • Human rights elsewhere
    Prabhjot Kaur