法国纽带:19世纪商标的国际传播

French Connections: The International Propagation of Trademarks in the Nineteenth Century

Enterprise and Society · 2008
被引 22 · 同刊同年前 2%
ABS 3

中文导读

本文通过分析报纸、法庭案例和外交谈判,发现英美商标法在成为国内法之前已受法国影响,挑战了普通法主导商标法发展的传统观点。

Abstract

The history of modern brands depends to a significant degree on the history of trademark law, but there are reasons to doubt how comprehensive standard versions of the latter history are. Business, economic, and even legal historians tend to accentuate the importance of the Anglo-Saxon common-law tradition and assume that the continental, civil law tradition followed in its wake. Yet the historical sequence of events suggests that almost exactly the opposite is true. Not only did the French have robust trademark law long before Great Britain and the United States, but the latter two countries only adopted trademark law after signing trademark clauses in diplomatic treaties with France. Drawing on newspaper accounts, public debates, specialist and general newspapers, as well as court cases and diplomatic negotiations, this paper argues that, to a certain degree, Anglo-Saxon trademark law was international before it was national. The evidence suggests that some of the easy verities on which arguments about modern brands, the “second industrial revolution,” and institutional economics are based may be more complex than is generally assumed.

商标法经济史法律史国际传播