Access to knowledge in the age of intellectual property

cover image

Where to find it

Davis Library (6th floor)

Call Number
K1401 .A929 2010
Status
Available

Information & Library Science Library

Call Number
K1401 .A929 2010 c. 2
Status
Available

Summary

The end of the twentieth century saw an explosive intrusion of intellectual property law into everyday life. Expansive copyright laws have been used to attack new forms of sharing and remixing facilitated by the Internet. International laws extending the patent rights of pharmaceutical companies have threatened the lives of millions of people around the world living with HIV/AIDS. For decades, governments have tightened the grip of intellectual property law at the bidding of information industries.

Recently, a multitude of groups around the world have emerged to challenge this wave of enclosure with a new counterpolitics of "access to knowledge" or "A2K." They include software programmers who take to the streets to attack software patents, AIDS activists who fight for generic medicines in poor countries, subsistence farmers who defend their right to food security and seeds, and college students who have created a new "free culture" movement to defend the digital commons.

In this volume, Gaëlle Krikorian and Amy Kapczynski have created the first anthology of the A2K movement, mapping this emerging field of activism as a series of historical moments, strategies, and concepts. Intellectual property law has become not only a site of new forms of transnational activism, but also a locus for profound new debates and struggles over politics, economics, and freedom. This collection vividly brings these debates into view and makes the terms of intellectual property law legible in their political implications around the world.

Contents

  • Preface p. 9
  • Part 1 Introduction
  • Access to Knowledge: A Conceptual Genealogy p. 17 Amy Kapczynski
  • Access to Knowledge as a Field of Activism p. 57 Gaëlle Krikorian
  • Part 2 The Emergence of the Politics of A2K
  • The Emergence of the A2K Movement: Reminiscences and Reflections of a Developing-Country Delegate p. 99 Ahmed Abdel Latif
  • The Revised Drug Strategy: Access to Essential Medicines, Intellectual Property, and the World Health Organization p. 127 Ellen't Hoen
  • The Doha Declaration on TRIPS and Public Health: An Impetus for Access to Medicines p. 141 Sangeeta Shashikant
  • An Uncertain Victory: The 2005 Rejection of Software Patents by the European Parliament p. 161 Philippe Aigrain
  • A2K at WIPO: The Development Agenda and the Debate on the Proposed Broadcasting Treaty p. 175 Viviana Muñoz Tellez and Sisule F. Musungu
  • Part 3 The Conceptual Terrain of A2K
  • "IP World"-Made by TNC Inc. p. 197 Peter Drahos
  • The Idea of Access to Knowledge and the Information Commons: Long-Term Trends and Basic Elements p. 217 Yochai Benkler
  • Access to Knowledge: The Case of Indigenous and Traditional Knowledge p. 237 Carlos M. Correa
  • Undermining Abundance: Counterproductive Uses of Technology and Law in Nature, Agriculture, and the Information Sector p. 253 Roberto Verzola
  • The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Book p. 277 Lawrence Liang
  • Free-Trade Agreements and Neoliberalism: How to Derail the Political Rationales that Impose Strong Intellectual Property Protection p. 293 Gaëlle Krikorian
  • Information/Knowledge in the Global Society of Control: A2K Theory and the Postcolonial Commons p. 329 Jeffrey Atteberry
  • Beyond Representation: The Figure of the Pirate p. 353 Lawrence Liang
  • Virtual Roundtable on A2K Politics p. 377 Amy Kapczynski and Gaëlle Krikorian and Onno Purbo and Jo Walsh and Anil Gupta and Rick Falkvinge
  • Part 4 Strategies and Tactics of A2K
  • A Comparison of A2K Movements: From Medicines to Farmers p. 391 Susan K. Sell
  • TRIPS Flexibilities: The Scope of Patentability and Oppositions of Patents in India p. 415 Chan Park and Leena Menghaney
  • TRIPS Flexibilities in Thailand: Between Law and Politics p. 435 Jiraporn Limpananont and Kannikar Kijtiwatchakul
  • Using Competition Law to Promote Access to Knowledge p. 451 Sean M. Flynn
  • Open-Access Publishing: From Principles to Practice p. 475 Manon A. Ress
  • The Global Politics of Interoperability p. 497 Laura DeNardis
  • Back to Balance: Limitations and Exceptions to Copyright p. 517 Vera Franz
  • New Medicines and Vaccines: Access, Incentives to Investment, and Freedom to Innovate p. 531 Spring Gombe and James Love
  • Virtual Roundtable on A2K Strategies: Interventions and Dilemmas p. 547 Amy Kapczynski and Gaëlle Krikorian and Harini Amarasuriya and Vera Franz and Heeseob Nam and Carolina Rossini and Dileepa Witharana
  • Interview with Yann Moulier Boutang p. 575 Gaëlle Krikorian
  • Nollywood: How it Works-A Conversation with Charles Igwe p. 595 Achal Prabhala
  • Epilogue: A2K in the Future-Visions and Scenarios
  • A Copyright Thriller Versus a Vision of a Digital Renaissance p. 607 Sarah Deutsch
  • Social Mutations in the Future p. 613 Gaëlle Krikorian
  • The Future of Intellectual Property and Access to Medicine p. 621 Eloan dos Santos Pinheiro
  • Options and Alternatives to Current Copyright Regimes and Practices p. 627 Hala Essalmawi
  • The Golden Touch and the Miracle of the Loaves p. 633 Roberto Verzola
  • Contributors p. 637

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