About IPR

The term “intellectual property” refers to the Intellectual assets that a person has created and acquired. Intellectual property rights include things like patents, trade-marks, copy rights, trade secrets, and other species like computer software or printed material, any new and useful process, machine, composition of matter, life form, article of manufacture, software, and copyrighted work. They also include things like new or improved devices, circuits, chemicals, drugs, genetically engineered biological organisms, data sets, software, musical processes, or distinctive and innovative uses of existing technologies.

On May 12, 2016, the National Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) Policy was approved by the Union Cabinet. The Policy acknowledges the need to encourage India’s creative and innovative energy and to direct these forces towards a better and more promising future. The National IPR Policy is a visionary document that unifies and integrates all IPRs under a single umbrella. It approaches IPRs holistically, accounting for all interconnections, and seeks to forge and take advantage of synergies between all types of intellectual property (IP), relevant statutes, and agencies. It establishes a formal system for implementation, oversight, and evaluation. It tries to adopt and modify best practices from around the world for the Indian context.
In order to promote research and give researchers a supportive atmosphere, the college developed the IPR Cell.

The College’s IPR cell works to educate the institution’s stakeholders about Intellectual Property Rights.

The College’s IPR Cell conducts seminars, workshops, etc. in collaboration with the Clubs and Committees of the College.