ContentsForeword ixForeword xi1 The Present and Future of the Protection of GeographicalIndications around the World: a Hundred MilesCompleted, and a Hundred More to Traverse 1Andrea Zappalaglio and Enrico BonadioPART I INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES2 Future Perspectives on the Geneva Act of the Lisbon Agreement 6Matthijs Geuze3 Continental, regional and national arrangements to protectgeographical indications in Africa 25Michael Blakeney4 The development of distinctive signs for collective use:a Latin American perspective 39Roxana C. BlasettiPART II EUROPEAN PERSPECTIVES5 A short history of the relationship between EUagricultural GIs and the Common Agricultural Policy:from the beginning to Regulation 2024/1143 54Andrea Zappalaglio6 Harmonising and unifying the protection of geographicalindications in the EU: a step-by-step approach 73Irina Kireeva and Bernard O'Connor7 The challenge of geographical indications for craft andindustrial products at the EU level 89Pilar Montero Garcìa-Noblejas8 The new EU regime on geographical indications:opportunities and challenges 106Alberto Ribeiro de Almeida9 Geographical collective marks after Halloumi: quo vadis? 115Anastasiia Kyrylenko and Vicente Zafrilla Díaz-Marta10 Farm to fork strategy and GIs: pie in the sky or a realopportunity for transformative change? 132Flavia GuerrieriPART III COMPARATIVE PERSPECTIVES11 The protection of geographical indications in China:recent developments and future challenges 152Xinzhe Song12 Guardians of Indian origin products: unravelling presentand future challenges in India's geographical indications 169Jayanta Ghosh13 The future of geographical indications: Australian perspectives 185Paula Zito14 Towards a pan-Caribbean geographical indication?A case study on rum GIs in the English, French andSpanish-speaking Caribbean 200Enrico Bonadio, Yentyl Williams and Bryan KhanPART IV GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES15 The multi-faceted contribution of geographical indicationsto sustainability 225Giovanni Belletti and Andrea Marescotti16 Country names matter: made in, made of, made by 242Natalie Corthésy17 Advancing the realisation of Farmers' Rights: the case forgeographical indications 261Barbara Pick.
The Future of Geographical Indications : European and Global Perspectives