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Ownership and Responsibility: Public Property in Creative Commons and Rice Genomics

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dc.contributor.author Smith, Elta
dc.date.accessioned 2012-07-27T14:37:27Z
dc.date.available 2012-07-27T14:37:27Z
dc.date.issued 2005 en_US
dc.identifier.uri https://hdl.handle.net/10535/8267
dc.description.abstract "Agricultural biotechnology-genomics, more specifically-is one of the busiest sites of research and debate at the nexus of science, technology, and policy. The field comprises emergent practices and technologies that produce and use information about plant genomes to improve agricultural production as well as the nutritional value of foods. In particular, intellectual property rights in genes and genome-related information are highly contested in this emerging arena. Intellectual property rights are often represented as binary choices between private and restricted, or public and free. I illustrate how property rights, in practice, can fall along a spectrum of possibilities, from wholly free to completely restricted. The definition of points on this spectrum, moreover, occurs not only (or even) in formal legal or regulatory institutions, but is rather simultaneously defined and defended through scientific practice. This spectrum constitutes a hybrid set of properties that I term 'public property. Debates centered on intellectual property rights are also a major focus in the area of copyright, especially among groups attempting to carve out niches for more 'public' availability of information such as music, movies, images and text. Creative Commons is a formalized attempt to develop alternatives to intellectual property laws, working both within and outside the legal system to this end. This study develops the concept of 'public property' through a comparative analysis of intellectual property debates and negotiations in rice genomics and similar practices in Creative Commons. In both cases, 'public property' raises questions about what notions of 'public' and 'private' mean as they get configured through intellectual property debates in technoscience-especially in genomics, where such arrangements have received little attention outside the research communities in which they have been developed and where the implications of property configurations will likely impact the entire political economy of rice, from upstream scientific practices to downstream products." en_US
dc.language English en_US
dc.subject biotechnology en_US
dc.subject information commons en_US
dc.subject genetic resources en_US
dc.subject intellectual property rights en_US
dc.subject rice en_US
dc.title Ownership and Responsibility: Public Property in Creative Commons and Rice Genomics en_US
dc.type Conference Paper en_US
dc.type.published unpublished en_US
dc.type.methodology Case Study en_US
dc.subject.sector Agriculture en_US
dc.subject.sector Information & Knowledge en_US
dc.subject.sector New Commons en_US
dc.identifier.citationconference Science and Democracy Network Meeting en_US
dc.identifier.citationconfdates June en_US
dc.identifier.citationconfloc Harvard University, Cambridge, MA en_US


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