‘From a scholarly perspective, the Handbook functions as a foundational reference work, synthesizing existing debates while advancing a more nuanced understanding of arbitration’s place within global IP governance. For practitioners, it offers concrete institutional and comparative insights essential for strategic decision-making in complex disputes, and for policymakers and institutional actors, it provides a measured account of how arbitration can be integrated into IP enforcement structures without undermining public regulatory objectives. Through its careful mapping of doctrine, procedure, sectoral practice, and national variation, The Research Handbook on Intellectual Property Rights and Arbitration makes a lasting and authoritative contribution to the literature, establishing an important benchmark for future scholarship at the intersection of intellectual property and dispute resolution and remaining an indispensable guide to both the potential and the limits of IP arbitration.’