In an opening vignette to an otherwise insightful article, Carol M. Rose (2003) compares people who hold intellectual property rights to poor villagers in India. They put effort and time into developing small but productive properties, only to have the wild tiger or rogue elephant of the public domain trample them or eat them up. In extreme cases, IP "villages" are abandoned and left to "the jungle" of public property. But Rose neglects another part of the story, and that is that the villagers are also hungry, and while they do not directly consume tigers, they do consume the environment a tiger needs to survive. This paper argues, from the perspective of legal pluralism, that both private and public properties are voracious. In recent west...
An important issue in the life sciences industries concerns the nature of the incentive mechanism th...
The global debate over intellectual property rights (IPR) relating to genomics, soft- ware, and scie...
While the focus of this paper is on Asia, much of the argument is drawn from experiences in rural re...
In an opening vignette to an otherwise insightful article, Carol M. Rose (2003) compares people who ...
"This paper argues, from the perspective of legal pluralism, that both private and public properties...
The idea of property in land as the paradigm case of property exercises despotic dominion over prope...
In a recent publication, the historian Paul Greenough addresses what he describes as the standard e...
The idea of property in land as the paradigm case of property exercises despotic dominion over prope...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
According to conventional law-and-economics theory, private property rights tend to evolve as resour...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. ...
Garrett Hardin\u27s classic description of the tragedy of the commons tells us that all environmenta...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
An important issue in the life sciences industries concerns the nature of the incentive mechanism th...
An important issue in the life sciences industries concerns the nature of the incentive mechanism th...
The global debate over intellectual property rights (IPR) relating to genomics, soft- ware, and scie...
While the focus of this paper is on Asia, much of the argument is drawn from experiences in rural re...
In an opening vignette to an otherwise insightful article, Carol M. Rose (2003) compares people who ...
"This paper argues, from the perspective of legal pluralism, that both private and public properties...
The idea of property in land as the paradigm case of property exercises despotic dominion over prope...
In a recent publication, the historian Paul Greenough addresses what he describes as the standard e...
The idea of property in land as the paradigm case of property exercises despotic dominion over prope...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
According to conventional law-and-economics theory, private property rights tend to evolve as resour...
University of Technology, Sydney. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences.NO FULL TEXT AVAILABLE. ...
Garrett Hardin\u27s classic description of the tragedy of the commons tells us that all environmenta...
Conventional conceptions of property rights focus on static definitions of property rights, usually ...
An important issue in the life sciences industries concerns the nature of the incentive mechanism th...
An important issue in the life sciences industries concerns the nature of the incentive mechanism th...
The global debate over intellectual property rights (IPR) relating to genomics, soft- ware, and scie...
While the focus of this paper is on Asia, much of the argument is drawn from experiences in rural re...