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The current volume is the eighth in a new and dynamic series on “global institutions.” The series strives (and, based on the initial volumes we believe, succeeds) to provide readers with definitive guides to the most visible aspects of what we know as “global governance”. Remarkable as it may seem, there exist relatively few books that offer in-depth treatments of prominent global bodies and processes, much less an entire series of concise and complementary volumes. Those that do exist are either out of date, inaccessible to the non-specialist reader, or seek to develop a specialized understanding of particular aspects of an institution or process rather than offer an overall. | The World Intellectual Property Organization Resurgence and the Development Agenda Christopher May Global Institutions The World Intellectual Property Organization The World Intellectual Property Organization aims to introduce a much ignored element of the contemporary structure of global governance to scholars of international political economy. The book discusses how WIPO works its antecedents and history the debates about the role and justification of intellectual property the role of WIPO within contemporary global politics the key elements of its relations with the World Trade Organization the Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights. The analysis then examines the recent political economy of the organization and argues that far from being the neutral or technical agency that it often presents itself as the WIPO is highly politicized and acts to socialize policy makers and civil servants into a specific view of intellectual property. However the recent proposal to establish a Development Agenda at the WIPO is an important development and the book concludes by examining the problems which have promoted this agenda and suggesting that these reforms of the WIPO should be welcomed. The World Intellectual Property Organization is a clear and accessible volume that will confirm the WIPO as one of the global institutions which any student of global governance must understand. Christopher May is Professor of Political Economy and Head of the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Lancaster. His publications include A Global Political Economy of Intellectual Property Rights The New Enclosures Routledge 2000 The Information Society A Sceptical View Polity 2002 and with Susan Sell Intellectual Property Rights A Critical History Boulder Lynne Rienner 2005 . Routledge Global Institutions Edited by Thomas G. Weiss The CUNY Graduate Center New York USA and Rorden Wilkinson University of Manchester UK The Global .