Abstract
The Right to Repair is a global movement in favour of rebalancing the relationship between manufacturers and end users of products and devices. As part of the European Union (EU) Green Deal and the Circular Economy Action Plan, EU legislators have made the Right to Repair a key policy aim. To date, however, the EU’s Right to Repair policy focus has been predominantly consumer law–oriented. This article sheds light on another key dimension of the Right to Repair—IP (and principally copyright law). It canvasses the ways in which copyright can inhibit repair activities, including curtailing access to repair information and by prohibiting circumvention of technological protection measures in software-enabled devices. In surveying proposed IP Right to Repair reforms in Australia and Canada, the article calls upon EU legislators to consider more strongly the role of IP laws in preventing repair. Moving beyond the enactment of new exceptions and limitations, the article proposes that EU legislators conceptualize the Right to Repair as a positive user’s right. Considering the social, economic and ecological benefits of increased access to repair, the authors contend that this requires exempting the application of exclusive rights where they impede repair activities, obligating rightsholders to provide access to repair information and software and stronger assurances to users and independent repairers through ex ante exceptions.
| Original language | Canadian English |
|---|---|
| Pages (from-to) | 344-352 |
| Journal | Journal of Intellectual Property Law and Practice |
| Volume | 18 |
| Issue number | 5 |
| Publication status | Published - Jan. 1 2023 |
UN SDGs
This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
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SDG 8 Decent Work and Economic Growth
Keywords
- Right to Repair
- European Union
- EU Green Deal
- Copyright Law
- Law Reform
- Australia
- Canada
Disciplines
- Comparative and Foreign Law
- European Law
- Intellectual Property Law
- Law
- Law and Economics
- Science and Technology Law
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