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Aurora Plomer

Biography

Aurora Plomer is Emeritus Professor of Intellectual Property and Human Rights at the University of Bristol Law. She joined Bristol Law School in 2016 from the University of Sheffield where she had been Director of the Sheffield Institute of Biotechnology, Law and Ethics for ten years. Previously, she was Reader in Law at the University of Nottingham and Lecturer in Law at the University of Leeds. She graduated in Philosophy from the University of Lancaster (BA, MA, Ph.D.) and in Law at the University of Manchester (LLB). Research interests relate to the intersection of intellectual property rights, human rights and innovation.

Professor Plomer is currently working on a book on Intellectual Property and the Human Rights of Companies in Europe (CUP). The book is the main output of a research project funded by a Leverhulme Major Research Fellowship (2020-2022) to investigate the history and rationale for the extension of human rights to companies in the European Convention on Human Rights.

 

Aurora Plomer

Visiting Research Fellow

0207 862 5151

In 2022, she was senior fellow at the School of Law of the London School of Economics in connection with the Leverhulme project. Her research was published in the LSE Legal Studies working papers series in June 2022: 'Trading Intellectual Property Rights in Europe: from IP Nationalism to International IP'' 

Between 2016 and 2020, she was a collaborator on an international project funded by the Academy of Finland Constitutional Hedges of Intellectual Property led by Prof. Tuomas Mylly. The project addresses the ways in which IP, investment Treaties and fundamental rights fence IP protection in Europe. Her chapter 'A Market Friendly Paradigm for IP Rights and Human Rights in Europe'  can be accessed in the open access collection edited by J. Griffiths & T. Mylly, Global Intellectual Property and the New Constitutionalism  (OUP, 2022).

Other recent research has focused on the institutional structure of the European patent system The Unified Patent Court and the Transformation of the European Patent System (2020).  In 2014, she was a Senior Fernand Braudel Fellow at the European University Institute in Florence where she researched the history of patent harmonization in Europe leading to the creation of the Unified Patent Court .

Her book Patents, Human Rights and Access to Science  (Edward Elgar, 2015) examines the historical and moral foundations of the right to access the benefits of science in international law (UDHR and ESCR) and the implications for current debates on the monopolies created by patents in the life sciences. She has continued this line of research in a chapter 'IP Rights and Human Rights: What History tells us and why it matters' in an open access collection edited by H. Porsdam & Porsdam Mann 'The Right to Science then and now'  (CUP, 2021).

In September 2017, she was invited to take part in a high-level international meeting on Innovation for Sustainable Development organized by UNESCO and the Mexican state of Guanajuato. Her presentation on 'Patents, Biotechnology and Global Justice' drew on examples of R&D public-private partnerships in Europe to highlight the challenges in integrating the protection of fundamental human rights with IP rights. An expanded version of her presentation'IP Right & Human Rights for Innovation and Sustainable Development'  has been published by UNESCO (2018).

Professor Plomer was a member of the European Commission's panel of ethics experts on new technologies, health, and innovation in the FP7 and Horizon 2020 programs. She has been a visiting fellow at the Boalt Hall School of Law at the University of California at Berkeley; the Centre for Biomedical Ethics at the University of Stanford, the University of Oxford Intellectual Property Research Centre, and the LSE school of law. Her research has been funded by UNESCO, the Council of Europe, the European Commission, the Brocher Foundation, the Wellcome Trust, the British Academy, and the ESRC.

For a full list of publications and projects see: Professor Aurora Plomer 

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