Intellectual property, a permanent meeting, mrs. Mitra aminlou, the director of the intellectual Property Management office , is with us in the studio. Mrs. Emilo , good morning, you are very welcome. Hello , good morning to you too, mrs. Amili. First, tell us what exactly we mean when we say intellectual property. After that, what measures have been taken to protect and preserve this iranian intellectual property, especially at the global level . We when we say intellectual property, intellectual property has different divisions and everything that is born from the thought of man is subject to intellectual property, but on the condition that it can be exploited , this is a main condition. Well, we have two big categories of Industrial Property in intellectual property. And we have the issue of copyright , which is Industrial Property, the issue of inventions , trademarks, industrial designs. The Geographical Indication that, well, in iran, many of us are actually subject to copyright
And a total collapse of the democracy, and into one party dick take or ship. And the most unstable form of governance. It is the legacy of the regime. And charisma. And able to resolve the audience and the propaganda machine. And we know from history, that after running out of enemies in side of the the country. He will turn elsewhere. Into 2005. I stopped playing chess and i turn today something that mistake russian politics. When you think of politics you think of Political Parties and funded and debates. And russias television and public debates. You think about fundraising and many other things. Elections. So, i knew i knew that it was an uphill battle. And my experience could not help at all. And unpredictable in putins russia. It is all happening within an engagement. Looking at the pictures 2006. Putin was hosting g7. I never called it g8 it was g7 plus one. It was given to yeltsin as an advance. It is was like a reward. Not a democracy or an industrial power. And china never ma
Dial in the arrangements in which Henry Kissinger reached effectively in the early 1970s. Which was a strategic accommodation between washington and beijing based on a common strategic between the soviet union. And the subsequent unfolding of what then become modernizing china, as well. Have we reached a new point at which that fundamental access has changed. I think personally that the shanghai meeting represents the culmination of the forces which have been in work for quite some time in the china russia relationship and the china u. S. Relationship which begin fundamentally to alter the premises of the 1972 strategic concord. The second point i would seek to go to how then our analysis to one side is this reality viewed from beijing . And then finally, and though i am no russia file, russia expert and no sovietologist by training, how some of these realities have viewed from moscow, as well. On the china view of reality, i think its always important to go back to the fundamental pri
That the panel is being televised by cspan and one of our speakers michael corner will be zooming in for her remarks and you can see her right here on the screen. Unfortunately another panelists kerry lane merritt had a family emergency a while ago and and let us know that she would not be to participate today. So just in terms of this panel, i would like to just put forward a few framing remarks on the 1862 moment and then let the speakers go for around 10 minutes each. I deliver their remarks maybe talk amongst each other raise some questions for each other. Ill be happy to facilitate that and then really open it up for q a with the audience and another reminder do come up to the mic if you have a question. So in most conventional histories of the civil war the year 1863 is often taken as the turning point of the war the euro Significant Union military victories at gettysburg and vicksburg and most importantly the year president Abraham Lincoln issued the historic emancipation procla
University of connecticut, and i will be cheering and moderating this roundtable. I should also inform you of course again that the panel is being televised by cspan, and one of our speakers, mycah conner, will be zooming in for her remarks and, you can see her right here on the screen. Unfortunately, another panelist, keri leigh merritt, had a family emergency a while ago, and let us know that you would not be able to participate today. So, just in terms of this panel, i would like to just put forward a few framing remarks on the 1862 moment, and then let the speakers go for ten minutes each, deliver their remarks, maybe talk amongst each other, raise some questions for each other. Id be happy to facilitate that. And then we will open it up for q a with the audience. And another reminder, do come up to the mic if you have a question. So in most conventional histories of the civil war, the year 1863 is often taken as the turning point of the war. The year of Significant Union military