Foreword: 20 years of the IPKat, Jeremy Phillips
Editors' note, Eleonora Rosati and Hayleigh Bosher
Part 1 - Developments in IP law, policy, and practice: Katfriends' views
1:Twenty years of IPKat, Robin Jacob
2:IP in the English court system, Richard Arnold
3:The IP profession over the last twenty years, Trevor Cook
4:20 years of change in IP strategy and litigation, David Stone
5:IP and evidence - A 20-year journey to the mainstream, David Humphries
6:Intellectual property teaching and research: How has the academy changed in the past two decades?, Irene Calboli
7:Twenty years of U.S. digital copyright: Adapting from analog, Jane C. Ginsburg
8:A view from the U.S. Copyright Office: Serving the public, Congress, the courts, and more from 2001 to 2021, Maria Strong
9:20 years after - The state of EU copyright law, Maria Martin-Prat
10:20 years in design law - What has changed?, Annette Kur
11:How image rights have changed over the past 20 years, Frederick Mostert and Sheyna Cruz
12:Lessons from the TRIPS waiver debate, Daniel Gervais
Part 2 - Developments in copyright and image/publicity rights
13:Copyright at the CJEU: Back to the start (of copyright protection), Eleonora Rosati
14:The copyright protection of makeup, Riana Harvey
15:Sixty years of international performers' rights: Time for a performers' copyright?, Mathilde Pavis
16:Fair use or fair dealing in Africa: The South African experience, Chijioke I. Okorie
17:Music copyright infringement cases in the US and UK: Building a house upon the sand or the rock?, Hayleigh Bosher
18:Automatic Content Recognition (ACR) technologies: A copyright management tool for content-sharing platforms, Giorgio Luceri
19:One does not simply upload a meme - Internet memes and the parody exemption in Europe, Peter Ling
20:From CD-copying vending machines to cloud-based TV recorders - 20 years of private copying in Germany, Mirko Brüß
21:New York right of publicity protects starlets and now ghouls, Marie-Andrée Weiss
22:Post-mortem rights of publicity - A comparison of New York and California, Emma Perot
Part 3 - Developments in the law of trade marks and geographical indications
23:Retromark: The last 20 years of trade marks, Darren Meale
24:Psychology, prototypicality, and basic shapes: The 'shape resulting from the nature of the goods' exclusion under EU trade mark law, Ilanah Fhima
25:3D trade marks: Distinctiveness and scope of protection, Valentina Torelli
26:Context of use in colour marks, Jan Jacobi
27:Revaluing periods of concurrent use in likelihood of confusion analyses, Lucas S. Michels
28:Sprechen Sie Cambozola? On the lessons from the early years of “evocation”, Anastasiia Kyrylenko
29:Of treats and treaties: The forgotten chapter of European Geographical Indications law, Léon Dijkman
Part 4 - Developments in the law of patents and trade secrets
30:Patentability of software in Europe, David Pearce
31:Standard essential patents and FRAND licensing: The evolution of the European approach, Stefano Barazza
32:Trolls, sharks, and privateers: 20 years of patent assertion entities, Bertrand Sautier
33:The doctrine of equivalents in the UK following Actavis v Lilly , Darren Smyth and Azadeh Vahdat
34:Rewriting European patent law by the back-door: On patents, politics, and peppers, Rose Hughes
35:20 years of SPC case law: A long way to go in the quest for clarity, Frantzeska Papadopoulou
36:Cybersecurity standards and trade secrecy in the United States, Michael S. Mireles
Part 5 - Developments in IP policy, practice, and literature
37:Intellectual property and sustainability, Laetitia Lagarde
38:A new Industrial Property Law in Mexico, Verónica Rodríguez Arguijo
39:Punitive damages for intellectual property rights infringement in China, Tian Lu
40:Jane Austen's Mansfield Park and the treatment of intellectual property, Neil Wilkof
41:The open source licensing phenomenon: Pledge, transformation, and lessons learnt, Ieva Giedrimaite
42:Unjustified threats in the online space, Eleanor Wilson
43:The changing impact of IP on individuals and small businesses and the importance of pro bono services, Stephen Jones and Hayleigh Bosher