TRATTATI
WIPO CONVENTION
Convention establishing the World Intellectual
Property Organization
Signed at Stockholm on July 14, 1967 and as amended on September
28, 1979
The Contracting Parties,
Desiring to contribute to better understanding and cooperation among
States for their mutual benefit
on the basis of respect for their sovereignty and equality,
Desiring, in order to encourage creative activity, to promote the protection
of intellectual property
throughout the world,
Desiring to modernize and render more efficient the administration of
the Unions established in the
fields of the protection of industrial property and the protection of
literary and artistic works, while fully respecting the independence
of each of the Unions,
Agree as follows:
Article 1
Establishment of the Organization
The World Intellectual Property Organization is hereby established.
Article 2
Definitions
For the purposes of this Convention:
(i) “Organization” shall mean the World Intellectual Property
Organization (WIPO);
(ii) “International Bureau” shall mean the International
Bureau of Intellectual Property;
(iii) “Paris Convention” shall mean the Convention for the
Protection of Industrial Property signed on March 20, 1883, including
any of its revisions;
(iv) “Berne Convention” shall mean the Convention for the
Protection of Literary and Artistic Works signed on September 9, 1886,
including any of its revisions;
(v) “Paris Union” shall mean the International Union established
by the Paris Convention;
(vi) “Berne Union” shall mean the International Union established
by the Berne Convention;
(vii) “Unions” shall mean the Paris Union, the Special Unions
and Agreements established in relation with that Union, the Berne Union,
and any other international agreement designed to promote the protection
of intellectual property whose administration is assumed by the Organization
according to Article 4(iii);
(viii) “intellectual property” shall include the rights
relating to:
– literary, artistic and scientific works,
– performances of performing artists, phonograms, and broadcasts,
– inventions in all fields of human endeavor,
– scientific discoveries,
– industrial designs,
– trademarks, service marks, and commercial names and designations,
– protection against unfair competition,
and all other rights resulting from intellectual activity in the industrial,
scientific, literary or artistic fields.
Article 3
Objectives of the Organization
The objectives of the Organization are:
(i) to promote the protection of intellectual property throughout the
world through cooperation among States and, where appropriate, in collaboration
with any other international organization,
(ii) to ensure administrative cooperation among the Unions.
Article 4
Functions
In order to attain the objectives described in Article 3, the Organization,
through its appropriate organs, and subject to the competence of each
of the Unions:
(i) shall promote the development of measures designed to facilitate
the efficient protection of intellectual property throughout the world
and to harmonize national legislation in this field;
(ii) shall perform the administrative tasks of the Paris Union, the
Special Unions established in relation with that Union, and the Berne
Union;
(iii) may agree to assume, or participate in, the administration of
any other international agreement designed to promote the protection
of intellectual property;
(iv) shall encourage the conclusion of international agreements designed
to promote the protection of intellectual property;
(v) shall offer its cooperation to States requesting legal–technical
assistance in the field of intellectual property;
(vi) shall assemble and disseminate information concerning the protection
of intellectual property, carry out and promote studies in this field,
and publish the results of such studies;
(vii) shall maintain services facilitating the international protection
of intellectual property and, where appropriate, provide for registration
in this field and the publication of the data concerning the registrations;
(viii) shall take all other appropriate action.
Article 5
Membership
(1) Membership in the Organization shall be open to any State which
is a member of any of the Unions as defined in Article 2(vii).
(2) Membership in the Organization shall be equally open to any State
not a member of any of the Unions, provided that:
(i) it is a member of the United Nations, any of the Specialized Agencies
brought into relationship with the United Nations, or the International
Atomic Energy Agency, or is a party to the Statute of the International
Court of Justice, or
(ii) it is invited by the General Assembly to become a party to this
Convention.
Article 6
General Assembly
(1)
(a) There shall be a General Assembly consisting of the States party
to this Convention which are members of any of the Unions.
(b) The Government of each State shall be represented by one delegate,
who may be assisted by alternate delegates, advisors, and experts.
(c) The expenses of each delegation shall be borne by the Government
which has appointed it.
(2) The General Assembly shall:
(i) appoint the Director General upon nomination by the Coordination
Committee;
(ii) review and approve reports of the Director General concerning the
Organization and give him all necessary instructions;
(iii) review and approve the reports and activities of the Coordination
Committee and give instructions to such Committee;
(iv) adopt the biennial budget of expenses common to the Unions;
(v) approve the measures proposed by the Director General concerning
the administration of the international agreements referred to in Article
4(iii);
(vi) adopt the financial regulations of the Organization;
(vii) determine the working languages of the Secretariat, taking into
consideration the practice of the United Nations;
(viii) invite States referred to under Article 5(2)(ii) to become party
to this Convention;
(ix) determine which States not Members of the Organization and which
intergovernmental and international non–governmental organizations
shall be admitted to its meetings as observers;
(x) exercise such other functions as are appropriate under this Convention.
(3)
(a) Each State, whether member of one or more Unions, shall have one
vote in the General Assembly.
(b) One–half of the States members of the General Assembly shall
constitute a quorum.
(c) Notwithstanding the provisions of subparagraph (b), if, in any session,
the number of States represented is less than one–half but equal
to or more than one–third of the States members of the General
Assembly, the General Assembly may make decisions but, with the exception
of decisions concerning its own procedure, all such decisions shall
take effect only if the following conditions are fulfilled. The International
Bureau shall communicate the said decisions to the States members of
the General Assembly which were not represented and shall invite them
to express in writing their vote or abstention within a period of three
months from the date of the communication. If, at the expiration of
this period, the number of States having thus expressed their vote or
abstention attains the number of States which was lacking for attaining
the quorum in the session itself, such decisions shall take effect provided
that at the same time the required majority still obtains.
(d) Subject to the provisions of subparagraphs (e) and (f), the General
Assembly shall make its decisions by a majority of two–thirds
of the votes cast.
(e) The approval of measures concerning the administration of international
agreements referred to in Article 4(iii) shall require a majority of
three–fourths of the votes cast.
(f) The approval of an agreement with the United Nations under Articles
57 and 63 of the Charter of the United Nations shall require a majority
of nine–tenths of the votes cast.
(g) For the appointment of the Director General (paragraph (2)(i)),
the approval of measures proposed by the Director General concerning
the administration of international agreements (paragraph (2)(v)), and
the transfer of headquarters (Article 10), the required majority must
be attained not only in the General Assembly but also in the Assembly
of the Paris Union and the Assembly of the Berne Union.
(h) Abstentions shall not be considered as votes.
(i) A delegate may represent, and vote in the name of, one State only.
(4)
(a) The General Assembly shall meet once in every second calendar year
in ordinary session, upon convocation by the Director General.
(b) The General Assembly shall meet in extraordinary session upon convocation
by the Director General either at the request of the Coordination Committee
or at the request of one–fourth of the States members of the General
Assembly.
(c) Meetings shall be held at the headquarters of the Organization.
(5) States party to this Convention which are not members of any of
the Unions shall be admitted to the meetings of the General Assembly
as observers.
(6) The General Assembly shall adopt its own rules of procedure.
Article 7
Conference
(1)
(a) There shall be a Conference consisting of the States party to this
Convention whether or not they are members of any of the Unions.
(b) The Government of each State shall be represented by one delegate,
who may be assisted by alternate delegates, advisors, and experts.
(c) The expenses of each delegation shall be borne by the Government
which has appointed it.
(2) The Conference shall:
(i) discuss matters of general interest in the field of intellectual
property and may adopt recommendations relating to such matters, having
regard for the competence and autonomy of the Unions;
(ii) adopt the biennial budget of the Conference;
(iii) within the limits of the budget of the Conference, establish the
biennial program of legal– technical assistance;
(iv) adopt amendments to this Convention as provided in Article 17;
(v) determine which States not Members of the Organization and which
intergovernmental and international non–governmental organizations
shall be admitted to its meetings as observers;
(vi) exercise such other functions as are appropriate under this Convention.
(3)
(a) Each Member State shall have one vote in the Conference.
(b) One–third of the Member States shall constitute a quorum.
(c) Subject to the provisions of Article 17, the Conference shall make
its decisions by a majority of two–thirds of the votes cast.
(d) The amounts of the contributions of States party to this Convention
not members of any of the Unions shall be fixed by a vote in which only
the delegates of such States shall have the right to vote.
(e) Abstentions shall not be considered as votes.
(f) A delegate may represent, and vote in the name of, one State only.
(4)
(a) The Conference shall meet in ordinary session, upon convocation
by the Director General, during the same period and at the same place
as the General Assembly.
(b) The Conference shall meet in extraordinary session, upon convocation
by the Director General, at the request of the majority of the Member
States.
(5) The Conference shall adopt its own rules of procedure.
Article 8
Coordination Committee
(1)
(a) There shall be a Coordination Committee consisting of the States
party to this Convention which
are members of the Executive Committee of the Paris Union, or the Executive
Committee of the Berne
Union, or both. However, if either of these Executive Committees is
composed of more than one–fourth of the number of the countries
members of the Assembly which elected it, then such Executive Committee
shall designate from among its members the States which will be members
of the Coordination Committee, in such a way that their number shall
not exceed the one–fourth referred to above, it being understood
that the country on the territory of which the Organization has its
headquarters shall not be included in the computation of the said one–fourth.
(b) The Government of each State member of the Coordination Committee
shall be represented by one
delegate, who may be assisted by alternate delegates, advisors, and
experts.
(c) Whenever the Coordination Committee considers either matters of
direct interest to the program or
budget of the Conference and its agenda, or proposals for the amendment
of this Convention which would affect the rights or obligations of States
party to this Convention not members of any of the Unions, one–
fourth of such States shall participate in the meetings of the Coordination
Committee with the same rights as members of that Committee. The Conference
shall, at each of its ordinary sessions, designate these States.
(d) The expenses of each delegation shall be borne by the Government
which has appointed it.
(2) If the other Unions administered by the Organization wish to be
represented as such in the Coordination Committee, their representatives
must be appointed from among the States members of the Coordination
Committee.
(3) The Coordination Committee shall:
(i) give advice to the organs of the Unions, the General Assembly, the
Conference, and the Director General, on all administrative, financial
and other matters of common interest either to two or more of the Unions,
or to one or more of the Unions and the Organization, and in particular
on the budget of expenses common to the Unions;
(ii) prepare the draft agenda of the General Assembly;
(iii) prepare the draft agenda and the draft program and budget of the
Conference;
(iv) [deleted]
(v) when the term of office of the Director General is about to expire,
or when there is a vacancy in the post of the Director General, nominate
a candidate for appointment to such position by the General Assembly;
if the General Assembly does not appoint its nominee, the Coordination
Committee shall nominate another candidate; this procedure shall be
repeated until the latest nominee is appointed by the General Assembly;
(vi) if the post of the Director General becomes vacant between two
sessions of the General Assembly, appoint an Acting Director General
for the term preceding the assuming of office by the new Director General;
(vii) perform such other functions as are allocated to it under this
Convention.
(4)
(a) The Coordination Committee shall meet once every year in ordinary
session, upon convocation by the Director General. It shall normally
meet at the headquarters of the Organization.
(b) The Coordination Committee shall meet in extraordinary session,
upon convocation by the Director General, either on his own initiative,
or at the request of its Chairman or one–fourth of its members.
(5)
(a) Each State whether a member of one or both of the Executive Committees
referred to in paragraph (1)(a), shall have one vote in the Coordination
Committee.
(b) One–half of the members of the Coordination Committee shall
constitute a quorum.
(c) A delegate may represent, and vote in the name of, one State only.
(6)
(a) The Coordination Committee shall express its opinions and make its
decisions by a simple majority of the votes cast. Abstentions shall
not be considered as votes.
(b) Even if a simple majority is obtained, any member of the Coordination
Committee may, immediately after the vote, request that the votes be
the subject of a special recount in the following manner:
two separate lists shall be prepared, one containing the names of the
States members of the Executive Committee of the Paris Union and the
other the names of the States members of the Executive Committee of
the Berne Union; the vote of each State shall be inscribed opposite
its name in each list in which it appears.
Should this special recount indicate that a simple majority has not
been obtained in each of those lists, the proposal shall not be considered
as carried.
(7) Any State Member of the Organization which is not a member of the
Coordination Committee may be
represented at the meetings of the Committee by observers having the
right to take part in the debates but without the right to vote.
(8) The Coordination Committee shall establish its own rules of procedure.
Article 9
International Bureau
(1) The International Bureau shall be the Secretariat of the Organization.
(2) The International Bureau shall be directed by the Director General,
assisted by two or more Deputy Directors General.
(3) The Director General shall be appointed for a fixed term, which
shall be not less than six years. He shall be eligible for reappointment
for fixed terms. The periods of the initial appointment and possible
subsequent appointments, as well as all other conditions of the appointment,
shall be fixed by the General Assembly.
(4)
(a) The Director General shall be the chief executive of the Organization.
(b) He shall represent the Organization.
(c) He shall report to, and conform to the instructions of, the General
Assembly as to the internal and
external affairs of the Organization.
(5) The Director General shall prepare the draft programs and budgets
and periodical reports on activities.
He shall transmit them to the Governments of the interested States and
to the competent organs of the
Unions and the Organization.
(6) The Director General and any staff member designated by him shall
participate, without the right to
vote, in all meetings of the General Assembly, the Conference, the Coordination
Committee, and any other committee or working group. The Director General
or a staff member designated by him shall be ex officio secretary of
these bodies.
(7) The Director General shall appoint the staff necessary for the efficient
performance of the tasks of the International Bureau. He shall appoint
the Deputy Directors General after approval by the Coordination Committee.
The conditions of employment shall be fixed by the staff regulations
to be approved by the Coordination Committee on the proposal of the
Director General. The paramount consideration in the employment of the
staff and in the determination of the conditions of service shall be
the necessity of securing the highest standards of efficiency, competence,
and integrity. Due regard shall be paid to the importance of recruiting
the staff on as wide a geographical basis as possible.
(8) The nature of the responsibilities of the Director General and of
the staff shall be exclusively international. In the discharge of their
duties they shall not seek or receive instructions from any Government
or from any authority external to the Organization. They shall refrain
from any action which might prejudice their position as international
officials. Each Member State undertakes to respect the exclusively international
character of the responsibilities of the Director General and the staff,
and not to seek to influence them in the discharge of their duties.
Article 10
Headquarters
(1) The headquarters of the Organization shall be at Geneva.
(2) Its transfer may be decided as provided for in Article 6(3)(d) and
(g).
Article 11
Finances
(1) The Organization shall have two separate budgets: the budget of
expenses common to the Unions, and the budget of the Conference.
(2)
(a) The budget of expenses common to the Unions shall include provision
for expenses of interest to
several Unions.
(b) This budget shall be financed from the following sources:
(i) contributions of the Unions, provided that the amount of the contribution
of each Union shall be fixed by the Assembly of that Union, having regard
to the interest the Union has in the common expenses;
(ii) charges due for services performed by the International Bureau
not in direct relation with any of the Unions or not received for services
rendered by the International Bureau in the field of legal–technical
assistance;
(iii) sale of, or royalties on, the publications of the International
Bureau not directly concerning any of the Unions;
(iv) gifts, bequests, and subventions, given to the Organization, except
those referred to in paragraph (3)(b)(iv);
(v) rents, interests, and other miscellaneous income, of the Organization.
(3)
(a) The budget of the Conference shall include provision for the expenses
of holding sessions of the Conference and for the cost of the legal–technical
assistance program.
(b) This budget shall be financed from the following sources:
(i) contributions of States party to this Convention not members of
any of the Unions;
(ii) any sums made available to this budget by the Unions, provided
that the amount of the sum made available by each Union shall be fixed
by the Assembly of that Union and that each Union shall be free to abstain
from contributing to the said budget;
(iii) sums received for services rendered by the International Bureau
in the field of legal–technical assistance;
(iv) gifts, bequests, and subventions, given to the Organization for
the purposes referred to in subparagraph (a).
(4)
(a) For the purpose of establishing its contribution towards the budget
of the Conference, each State party to this Convention not member of
any of the Unions shall belong to a class, and shall pay its annual
contributions on the basis of a number of units fixed as follows:
Class A.......... 10
Class B.......... 3
Class C.......... 1
(b) Each such State shall, concurrently with taking action as provided
in Article 14(1), indicate the class to which it wishes to belong. Any
such State may change class. If it chooses a lower class, the State
must announce it to the Conference at one of its ordinary sessions.
Any such change shall take effect at the beginning of the calendar year
following the session.
(c) The annual contribution of each such State shall be an amount in
the same proportion to the total sum to be contributed to the budget
of the Conference by all such States as the number of its units is to
the total of the units of all the said States.
(d) Contributions shall become due on the first of January of each year.
(e) If the budget is not adopted before the beginning of a new financial
period the budget shall be at the same level as the budget of the previous
year, in accordance with the financial regulations.
(5) Any State party to this Convention not member of any of the Unions
which is in arrears in the payment of its financial contributions under
the present Article, and any State party to this Convention member of
any of the Unions which is in arrears in the payment of its contributions
to any of the Unions,
shall have no vote in any of the bodies of the Organization of which
it is a member, if the amount of its arrears equals or exceeds the amount
of the contributions due from it for the preceding two full years.
However, any of these bodies may allow such a State to continue to exercise
its vote in that body if, and as long as, it is satisfied that the delay
in payment arises from exceptional and unavoidable circumstances.
(6) The amount of the fees and charges due for services rendered by
the International Bureau in the field of legal–technical assistance
shall be established, and shall be reported to the Coordination Committee,
by the Director General.
(7) The Organization, with the approval of the Coordination Committee,
may receive gifts, bequests, and
subventions, directly from Governments, public or private institutions,
associations or private persons.
(8)
(a) The Organization shall have a working capital fund which shall be
constituted by a single payment made by the Unions and by each State
party to this Convention not member of any Union. If the fund becomes
insufficient, it shall be increased.
(b) The amount of the single payment of each Union and its possible
participation in any increase
shall be decided by its Assembly.
(c) The amount of the single payment of each State party to this Convention
not member of any Union and its part in any increase shall be a proportion
of the contribution of that State for the year in which the fund is
established or the increase decided. The proportion and the terms of
payment shall be fixed by the Conference on the proposal of the Director
General and after it has heard the advice of the Coordination Committee.
(9)
(a) In the headquarters agreement concluded with the State on the territory
of which the Organization
has its headquarters, it shall be provided that, whenever the working
capital fund is insufficient, such State shall grant advances. The amount
of these advances and the conditions on which they are granted shall
be the subject of separate agreements, in each case, between such State
and the Organization. As long as it remains under the obligation to
grant advances, such State shall have an ex officio seat on the Coordination
Committee.
(b) The State referred to in subparagraph (a) and the Organization shall
each have the right to denounce the obligation to grant advances, by
written notification. Denunciation shall take effect three years after
the end of the year in which it has been notified.
(10) The auditing of the accounts shall be effected by one or more Member
States, or by external auditors, as provided in the financial regulations.
They shall be designated, with their agreement, by the General Assembly.
Article 12
Legal Capacity; Privileges and Immunities
(1) The Organization shall enjoy on the territory of each Member State,
in conformity with the laws of
that State, such legal capacity as may be necessary for the fulfillment
of the Organization’s objectives and for the exercise of its functions.
(2) The Organization shall conclude a headquarters agreement with the
Swiss Confederation and with any other State in which the headquarters
may subsequently be located.
(3) The Organization may conclude bilateral or multilateral agreements
with the other Member States
with a view to the enjoyment by the Organization, its officials, and
representatives of all Member States, of such privileges and immunities
as may be necessary for the fulfillment of its objectives and for the
exercise of its functions.
(4) The Director General may negotiate and, after approval by the Coordination
Committee, shall conclude and sign on behalf of the Organization the
agreements referred to in paragraphs (2) and (3).
Article 13
Relations with Other Organizations
(1) The Organization shall, where appropriate, establish working relations
and cooperate with other intergovernmental organizations. Any general
agreement to such effect entered into with such organizations shall
be concluded by the Director General after approval by the Coordination
Committee.
(2) The Organization may, on matters within its competence, make suitable
arrangements for consultation and cooperation with international non–governmental
organizations and, with the consent of the Governments concerned, with
national organizations, governmental or non–governmental. Such
arrangements shall be made by the Director General after approval by
the Coordination Committee.
Article 14
Becoming Party to the Convention
(1) States referred to in Article 5 may become party to this Convention
and Member of the Organization
by:
(i) signature without reservation as to ratification, or
(ii) signature subject to ratification followed by the deposit of an
instrument of ratification, or
(iii) deposit of an instrument of accession.
(2) Notwithstanding any other provision of this Convention, a State
party to the Paris Convention, the
Berne Convention, or both Conventions, may become party to this Convention
only if it concurrently ratifies or accedes to, or only after it has
ratified or acceded to:
either the Stockholm Act of the Paris Convention in its entirety or
with only the limitation set forth in
Article 20(1)(b)(i) thereof,
or the Stockholm Act of the Berne Convention in its entirety or with
only the limitation set forth in Article 28(1)(b)(i) thereof.
(3) Instruments of ratification or accession shall be deposited with
the Director General.
Article 15
Entry into Force of the Convention
(1) This Convention shall enter into force three months after ten States
members of the Paris Union and
seven States members of the Berne Union have taken action as provided
in Article 14(1), it being understood that, if a State is a member of
both Unions, it will be counted in both groups. On that date, this Convention
shall enter into force also in respect of States which, not being members
of either of the two Unions, have taken action as provided in Article
14(1) three months or more prior to that date.
(2) In respect to any other State, this Convention shall enter into
force three months after the date on
which such State takes action as provided in Article 14(1).
Article 16
Reservations
No reservations to this Convention are permitted.
Article 17
Amendments
(1) Proposals for the amendment of this Convention may be initiated
by any Member State, by the Coordination Committee, or by the Director
General. Such proposals shall be communicated by the Director General
to the Member States at least six months in advance of their consideration
by the Conference.
(2) Amendments shall be adopted by the Conference. Whenever amendments
would affect the rights and obligations of States party to this Convention
not members of any of the Unions, such States shall also vote.
On all other amendments proposed, only States party to this Convention
members of any Union shall vote.
Amendments shall be adopted by a simple majority of the votes cast,
provided that the Conference shall vote only on such proposals for amendments
as have previously been adopted by the Assembly of the Paris Union and
the Assembly of the Berne Union according to the rules applicable in
each of them regarding the adoption of amendments to the administrative
provisions of their respective Conventions.
(3) Any amendment shall enter into force one month after written notifications
of acceptance, effected in accordance with their respective constitutional
processes, have been received by the Director General from three–fourths
of the States Members of the Organization, entitled to vote on the proposal
for amendment pursuant to paragraph (2), at the time the Conference
adopted the amendment. Any amendments thus accepted shall bind all the
States which are Members of the Organization at the time the amendment
enters into force or which become Members at a subsequent date, provided
that any amendment increasing the financial obligations of Member States
shall bind only those States which have notified their acceptance of
such amendment.
Article 18
Denunciation
(1) Any Member State may denounce this Convention by notification addressed
to the Director General.
(2) Denunciation shall take effect six months after the day on which
the Director General has received the notification.
Article 19
Notifications
The Director General shall notify the Governments of all Member States
of:
(i) the date of entry into force of the Convention,
(ii) signatures and deposits of instruments of ratification or accession,
(iii) acceptances of an amendment to this Convention, and the date upon
which the amendment
enters into force,
(iv) denunciations of this Convention.
Article 20
Final Provisions
(1)
(a) This Convention shall be signed in a single copy in English, French,
Russian and Spanish, all texts
being equally authentic, and shall be deposited with the Government
of Sweden.
(b) This Convention shall remain open for signature at Stockholm until
January 13, 1968.
(2) Official texts shall be established by the Director General, after
consultation with the interested Governments, in German, Italian and
Portuguese, and such other languages as the Conference may designate.
(3) The Director General shall transmit two duly certified copies of
this Convention and of each amendment adopted by the Conference to the
Governments of the States members of the Paris or Berne
Unions, to the Government of any other State when it accedes to this
Convention, and, on request, to the Government of any other State. The
copies of the signed text of the Convention transmitted to the
Governments shall be certified by the Government of Sweden.
(4) The Director General shall register this Convention with the Secretariat
of the United Nations.
Article 21
Transitional Provisions
(1) Until the first Director General assumes office, references in this
Convention to the International Bureau or to the Director General shall
be deemed to be references to the United International Bureau for the
Protection of Industrial, Literary and Artistic Property (also called
the United International Bureau for the Protection of Intellectual Property
(BIRPI)), or its Director, respectively.
(2)
(a) States which are members of any of the Unions but which have not
become party to this Convention may, for five years from the date of
entry into force of this Convention, exercise, if they so desire, the
same rights as if they had become party to this Convention. Any State
desiring to exercise such rights shall give written notification to
this effect to the Director General; this notification shall be effective
on the date of its receipt. Such States shall be deemed to be members
of the General Assembly and the Conference until the expiration of the
said period.
(b) Upon expiration of this five–year period, such States shall
have no right to vote in the General Assembly, the Conference, and the
Coordination Committee.
(c) Upon becoming party to this Convention, such States shall regain
such right to vote.
(3)
(a) As long as there are States members of the Paris or Berne Unions
which have not become party to this Convention, the International Bureau
and the Director General shall also function as the United International
Bureau for the Protection of Industrial, Literary and Artistic Property,
and its Director, respectively.
(b) The staff in the employment of the said Bureau on the date of entry
into force of this Convention shall, during the transitional period
referred to in subparagraph (a), be considered as also employed by the
International Bureau.
(4)
(a) Once all the States members of the Paris Union have become Members
of the Organization, the rights, obligations, and property, of the Bureau
of that Union shall devolve on the International Bureau of the Organization.
(b) Once all the States members of the Berne Union have become Members
of the Organization, the rights, obligations, and property, of the Bureau
of that Union shall devolve on the International Bureau of the Organization.
NEW CONTRIBUTION SYSTEM
The Governing Bodies of WIPO and the Unions administered by WIPO adopted
with effect from January 1, 1994, a new contribution system that replaces
the contribution system set forth in Article 11(4)(a), (b) and (c) of
the WIPO Convention, Article 16(4)(a), (b) and (c) of the Paris Convention,
Article 25(4)(a), (b) and (c) of the Berne Convention and the corresponding
provisions of the Strasbourg (IPC), Nice, Locarno and Vienna Agreements.
Details concerning that system may be obtained from the International
Bureau of WIPO.
Fonte: http://www.wipo.int
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