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首页> 外文期刊>Boston College Law Review >I WANNA DESIGN FOR SOMEBODY (WHO NEEDS ME): THE INTERSECTION OF HUMANITARIAN ENGINEERING, CHOICE-OF-LAW, AND TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IN KENYA
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I WANNA DESIGN FOR SOMEBODY (WHO NEEDS ME): THE INTERSECTION OF HUMANITARIAN ENGINEERING, CHOICE-OF-LAW, AND TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER IN KENYA

机译:我为某人设计的WANNA(需要我):肯尼亚的人道主义工程,法律选择与技术转让的交集

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摘要

A significant technology gap exists between developed and developing countries. Though developing countries have started to self-innovate, they do not possess adequate means to fulfill their right to develop, which the UN recognizes as an essential human right. For developing countries to exercise this right, developed countries must transfer technology. Humanitarian engineers have confronted this challenge without any international guidance or regulation, as no uniform system for international technology transfer agreements exists. To remedy this inadequacy, scholars have proposed the characteristic approach, which suggests that the contents of the contract, rather than the parties' locations, should control the choice of law. This proposal, however, fails to consider unintended, harmful consequences on developing countries. This Note analyzes the characteristic approach through a case study of humanitarian engineers in Kenya, a country held back by a lack of infrastructure while standing on the cusp of innovation. The characteristic approach does not present a viable solution for Kenya because it favors the law of developed countries too often. Instead, technology transfer agreements should stipulate that the developing country's law should govern the agreement. Further, when this results in an insurmountable burden on the transferor, a developed country's law should only control if the contract adheres to the policies of Africa's regional economic communities. In the case of humanitarian engineers, academic institutions and international organizations focused on humanitarian engineering have an ethical burden to enforce this standard.
机译:发达国家和发展中国家之间存在巨大的技术差距。尽管发展中国家已开始自我创新,但它们没有足够的手段来实现其发展权,而联合国承认这是一项基本人权。为了使发展中国家行使这项权利,发达国家必须转让技术。由于没有统一的国际技术转让协议体系,人道主义工程师在没有任何国际指导或法规的情况下就面临着这一挑战。为了弥补这一不足,学者们提出了一种有特色的方法,该方法表明合同的内容而不是当事人的所在地应控制法律的选择。但是,该提议没有考虑对发展中国家的意外的,有害的后果。本说明通过对肯尼亚的人道主义工程师进行的案例研究来分析这种特色方法,肯尼亚是一个立足于创新风口浪尖而又缺乏基础设施的国家。对于肯尼亚来说,特征性方法并不是一个可行的解决方案,因为它过于偏爱发达国家的法律。相反,技术转让协议应规定该协议应由发展中国家的法律管辖。此外,如果这给转让人造成了无法克服的负担,则发达国家的法律应仅在合同遵守非洲区域经济共同体的政策的情况下进行控制。就人道主义工程师而言,专注于人道主义工程的学术机构和国际组织在道德上负有执行该标准的责任。

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