Hardback
Kritika: Essays on Intellectual Property
Volume 3
9781788971157 Edward Elgar Publishing
The fields of intellectual property have broadened and deepened in so many ways that commentators struggle to keep up with the ceaseless rush of developments and hot topics. Kritika: Essays on Intellectual Property is a series that is designed to help authors escape this rush. It creates a forum for authors who wish to more deeply question, investigate and reflect upon the evolving themes and principles of the discipline.
More Information
Contributors
Contents
More Information
The fields of intellectual property have broadened and deepened in so many ways that commentators struggle to keep up with the ceaseless rush of developments and hot topics. Kritika: Essays on Intellectual Property is a series that is designed to help authors escape this rush. It creates a forum for authors who wish to more deeply question, investigate and reflect upon the evolving themes and principles of the discipline.
This third volume of Kritika again brings together leading scholars from different fields and disciplines. Their essays reflect on some of the big problems in the field, addressing issues such as the way that institutions like WIPO continue with their propertization missions, how the bells of lobbyists toll incessantly for new data rights, and the ways in which discourses of human rights and information justice struggle to turn intellectual property from an instrument of private accumulation into one of service for the common good. Important questions in the field are also tackled; for example, how does the Islamic view of knowledge as life cohere with intellectual property, at a time when, as other essays show, intellectual property grounds new forms of state imperium?
With contributions from: Sara Bannerman; Shamnad Basheer; Rahul Bajaj; Mohammed El Said; Blayne Haggart; Thomas Hoeren; P. Bernt Hugenholtz and Fiona Macmillan
This third volume of Kritika again brings together leading scholars from different fields and disciplines. Their essays reflect on some of the big problems in the field, addressing issues such as the way that institutions like WIPO continue with their propertization missions, how the bells of lobbyists toll incessantly for new data rights, and the ways in which discourses of human rights and information justice struggle to turn intellectual property from an instrument of private accumulation into one of service for the common good. Important questions in the field are also tackled; for example, how does the Islamic view of knowledge as life cohere with intellectual property, at a time when, as other essays show, intellectual property grounds new forms of state imperium?
With contributions from: Sara Bannerman; Shamnad Basheer; Rahul Bajaj; Mohammed El Said; Blayne Haggart; Thomas Hoeren; P. Bernt Hugenholtz and Fiona Macmillan
Contributors
Contributors: R. Bajaj, S. Bannerman, S. Basheer, M. El Said, B. Haggart, T. Hoeren, P.B. Hugenholtz, F. Macmillan
Contents
Contents:
1. ‘Love is blind, and lovers cannot see’: Resisting Copyright’s Romance
Fiona Macmillan
2. The hypertrophy of German copyright law – And some fragmentary ideas on information law
Thomas Hoeren
3. Against ‘Data Property’
P. Bernt Hugenholtz
4. Who am I? Of patent independence and ‘adjudicative regulators’
Shamnad Basheer and Rahul Bajaj
5. Rethinking the Foundations of Intellectual Property: Applying Islamic Principles on Selected Contemporary IP Challenges
Mohammed El Said
6. Remodelling Global Intellectual Property
Sara Bannerman
7. New economic models, new forms of state: The emergence of the ‘info-imperium’ state
Blayne Haggart
Index
1. ‘Love is blind, and lovers cannot see’: Resisting Copyright’s Romance
Fiona Macmillan
2. The hypertrophy of German copyright law – And some fragmentary ideas on information law
Thomas Hoeren
3. Against ‘Data Property’
P. Bernt Hugenholtz
4. Who am I? Of patent independence and ‘adjudicative regulators’
Shamnad Basheer and Rahul Bajaj
5. Rethinking the Foundations of Intellectual Property: Applying Islamic Principles on Selected Contemporary IP Challenges
Mohammed El Said
6. Remodelling Global Intellectual Property
Sara Bannerman
7. New economic models, new forms of state: The emergence of the ‘info-imperium’ state
Blayne Haggart
Index