Julie Cohen\u27s Configuring the Networked Self is an extraordinarily insightful book. Cohen not only applies extant theory to law; she also distills it into her own distinctive social theory of the information age. Thus, even relatively short sections of chapters of her book often merit article-length close readings. I here offer a brief for the practical importance of Cohen’s theory, and ways it should influence intellectual property policy and scholarship
We live in an age in which expressive, informational, and technological subject matter are becoming ...
Reviews and Reviewers: MAKING AND UNMAKING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: CREATIVE PRODUCTION IN LEGAL AND C...
Julie Cohen’s Configuring the Networked Self1 is a book about information policy in the digital age,...
Julie Cohen\u27s Configuring the Networked Self is an extraordinarily insightful book. Cohen not onl...
A NEOFEDERALIST VISION OF TRIPS: THE RESILIENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY REGIME, b...
This short but confident book considers intellectual property ‘law’ in the most distanced sense. In ...
PUTTING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN ITS PLACE – RIGHTS DISCOURSES, CREATIVE LABOR AND THE EVERYDAY, by ...
FROM MAIMONIDES TO MICROSOFT: THE JEWISH LAW OF COPYRIGHT SINCE THE BIRTH OF PRINT, by Neil Weinstoc...
Reviews and Reviewers: THE PUBLIC DOMAIN: ENCLOSING THE COMMONS OF THE MIND by James Boyle. Reviewed...
This book is an interdisciplinary marvel. Its focus on creative communities and their practices avoi...
It is a common claim that law is always catching up with technology. This is not entirely fair. The ...
A marriage between intellectual property and private international law seems to have instant status ...
The legal and technical rules governing flows of information are out of balance, argues Julie E. Coh...
Reviews and Reviewers: JUSTIFYING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, by Robert P. Merges. Reviewed by Amy L. Lan...
PATENT POLITICS: LIFE FORMS, MARKETS, AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE, by Sh...
We live in an age in which expressive, informational, and technological subject matter are becoming ...
Reviews and Reviewers: MAKING AND UNMAKING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: CREATIVE PRODUCTION IN LEGAL AND C...
Julie Cohen’s Configuring the Networked Self1 is a book about information policy in the digital age,...
Julie Cohen\u27s Configuring the Networked Self is an extraordinarily insightful book. Cohen not onl...
A NEOFEDERALIST VISION OF TRIPS: THE RESILIENCE OF THE INTERNATIONAL INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY REGIME, b...
This short but confident book considers intellectual property ‘law’ in the most distanced sense. In ...
PUTTING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY IN ITS PLACE – RIGHTS DISCOURSES, CREATIVE LABOR AND THE EVERYDAY, by ...
FROM MAIMONIDES TO MICROSOFT: THE JEWISH LAW OF COPYRIGHT SINCE THE BIRTH OF PRINT, by Neil Weinstoc...
Reviews and Reviewers: THE PUBLIC DOMAIN: ENCLOSING THE COMMONS OF THE MIND by James Boyle. Reviewed...
This book is an interdisciplinary marvel. Its focus on creative communities and their practices avoi...
It is a common claim that law is always catching up with technology. This is not entirely fair. The ...
A marriage between intellectual property and private international law seems to have instant status ...
The legal and technical rules governing flows of information are out of balance, argues Julie E. Coh...
Reviews and Reviewers: JUSTIFYING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY, by Robert P. Merges. Reviewed by Amy L. Lan...
PATENT POLITICS: LIFE FORMS, MARKETS, AND THE PUBLIC INTEREST IN THE UNITED STATES AND EUROPE, by Sh...
We live in an age in which expressive, informational, and technological subject matter are becoming ...
Reviews and Reviewers: MAKING AND UNMAKING INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: CREATIVE PRODUCTION IN LEGAL AND C...
Julie Cohen’s Configuring the Networked Self1 is a book about information policy in the digital age,...