Investigation Año IX - Nº 15 - 2015  
 
» CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS AND INTELECTUAL PROPERTY S PROTECTION
By Martín Augusto Cortese

Sumary

The structure of the Intellectual Property s constitutional protection has as base the article 17 of our Constitution, when says: ...Every author or inventor is exclusive owner of its work, invention or discovery, by the term that the law agree him...
On the other hand, and not less important, the article 14 arranges: All the inhabitants of the Nation enjoy the following rights according to the laws that regulate their exercise, to know: to work and to exercise lawful every industry to use and to have its property As everyone might see, the property on intangible goods has its recognition in our Constitution not only in the part cited of the article 17, but also is inferred logically from article 14, which has intimate relation with the 17 that begins saying The property is inviolable and no inhabitant of the Nation can be private of her
On this regulation cited and on the international treaties in the matter ratified by Argentina, which by the article 75 clause 22 are in a superior level over the laws, is that makes sense and also support the national laws related to the recognition and protection of the intangible goods -intellectual-.

Key words

Intangible Goods - Intellectual Property - Constitutional Rights

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