Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration

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Signed
  
31 October 1958 (Lisbon) 14 July 1967 (Stockholm) 21 May 2015 (Geneva)

Location
  
Lisbon, Stockholm, Geneva

Effective
  
25 September 1966 (Lisbon) 31 October 1973 (Stockholm) not in force (Geneva)

Signatories
  
11 (Lisbon) 5 (Stockholm) 11 (Geneva)

Parties
  
10 (Lisbon) 27 (Stockholm) 0 (Geneva)

Depositary
  
Switzerland (Lisbon), Sweden (Stockholm), WIPO (Geneva)

The Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration, signed on 31 October 1958, ensures that in member countries, appellations of origin receive protection when are protected in their country of origin. It lays down provisions for what qualifies as an appellation of origin, protection measures and establishes an International Register of Appellations of Origin, run by the World Intellectual Property Organization. The agreement came into force in 1966, and was revised at Stockholm (1967) and amended in 1979. As of May 2015, 28 states are party to the convention and 1000 appellations of origin has been registered.

Contents

The agreements establishes a Special Union under Article 19 of the Paris Convention for the Protection of Industrial Property (1883). Some aspects of the agreement have been superseded by the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights.

2015 Act

In May 2015, the Geneva Act to the Agreement was adopted, formally extending protection to Geographical Indication and changing the name: Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement on Appellations of Origin and Geographical Indications. The act furthermore allows intergovernmental organisations to be become parties. On 21 May the Act was signed by 13 states: Bosnia and Herzegovina, Burkina Faso, Congo, France, Gabon, Hungary, Mali, Nicaragua, Peru, Romania and Togo.

Parties

The treaty applies mutually between the parties of the 1958 Lisbon Agreement and the 1967 Stockholm Act, but not between a party solely to the 1958 Agreement and another party solely to the 1967 Stockholm act. The Geneva Act is not in force, but after it enters into force, it will only apply between the Geneva act parties. If a state is a party to multiple Lisbon instruments, then a registered appellation of origin registered under any of the instruments applies also to parties of the other instruments the state is a party to.

References

Lisbon Agreement for the Protection of Appellations of Origin and their International Registration Wikipedia