1st Edition

Who Owns Knowledge? Knowledge and the Law

By David E. Price, Bernd Weiler Copyright 2008
    342 Pages
    by Routledge

    344 Pages
    by Routledge

    Who Owns Knowledge? explores the emerging linkages between the extension of knowledge and the law. It anticipates that the legal system will not only be called upon to adjudicate in matters of creative minds, but will be expected to do so to an ever increasing degree.

    Linkages between the legal system and knowledge are bound to multiply in modern societies. Ironically, while increasingly relying on knowledge, we are simultaneously investing significant resources into controlling this same knowledge. This includes developing a system of legal governance over how knowledge is extended or enlarged. Such modes of governance may take the form of regulatory legal codes, or legal challenges and judgments that shape the evolution of modern society and potentially transform knowledge itself, as a productive force. Who Owns Knowledge? asks such questions as: What is the appropriate balance of public and private interests involved in this process? How can creative powers, natural resources and indigenous knowledge be protected from either public or private exploitation? Does the law have the power to prevent this exploitation, or is adaptive technology needed? Also, in this identity theft conscious age, how can the rights of the individual be protected against policies allowing access to any kind of information, especially confidential information? The editors and contributors demonstrate that the relationship between knowledge and the law needs to be further researched and discussed. Who Owns Knowledge? is a must-read for those interested in the subjects of intellectual property, the history and development of modern legal and economic systems and their entanglements, and how judicial systems make choices between the legal and economic systems and, especially, between the public and private good and their often opposing interests.

    Introduction Knowledge and the Law: Can Knowledge be Made Just?; 1: The Social Contexts of Knowledge and the Law; 1: The Law and Economics of Rights in Valuable Information; 2: Scientific Norms, Legal Facts, and the Politics of Knowledge; 3: Is a Just System also Fair? Traversing the Domain of Knowledge, Institutions, Culture, and Ethics 1; 2: Major Social Institutions, Knowledge and the Law; 4: Fundamental Ignorance in the Regulation of Reactor Safety and Flooding: Risks of Knowledge Management in the Risk Society 1; 5: Science in Whose Interest? States, Firms, the Public, and Scientific Knowledge 1; 3: The Social Context of Knowledge and the Law: Who Owns Knowledge; 6: The Difficult Reception of Rigorous Descriptive Social Science in the Law; 7: Inexplicable Law: Legality’s Adventure in Europe *; 8: In Search of the Story; 9: Does the Category of Justice Apply to Drug Research Based on Traditional Knowledge? The Case of the Hoodia Cactus and the Politics of Biopiracy; 10: Profiles and Correlatable Humans; 11: Research Ethics as the Latest Moral Panic in the Governance of Scientific Knowledge; 12: Concluding Observations

    Biography

    Bernd Weiler