4.2 Article

THE POLITICS OF GLOBAL INFORMATION SHARING: WHOSE CULTURAL AGENDAS ARE BEING ADVANCED?

Journal

SOCIAL & LEGAL STUDIES
Volume 18, Issue 4, Pages 479-504

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0964663909345095

Keywords

Empire; Enlightenment; Indigenous rights; information commons; intellectual property; public domain; race; sovereignty

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Open-knowledge communities, the public domain and public policies protecting the global sharing of information and resources seek to counter the last decade of IP maximalization. Such movements aim to rebalance 'public' interests within IP discourse. Historically, dispossession of Indigenous persons in settler communities was concomitant with their exclusion from 'the public'. This has significant consequences for Indigenous peoples struggling to regain control over knowledge resources today. This article considers the imaginary inclusions that underlie Anglo-Australian intellectual property law and considers problems with redressing past injustice by defining Indigenous difference in terms of a cultural exception within intellectual property law.

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