The museum of bioprospecting, intellectual property, and the public domain: a place, a process, a philosophy / edited by Joseph Henry Vogel ; contributors: María Jose Moreno Viqueira, Manuel Ruiz, Tomme Young, Stephen B. Brush, Charles R. Mcmanis, Valentina Delich ; translations by Camilo Comides
Vogel, Joseph Henry [editor] | Moreno Viqueira, María Jose [colaboradora] | Ruiz, Manuel [colaborador] | Young, Tomme [colaborador] | Brush, Stephen B [colaborador] | Mcmanis, Charles R [colaborador] | Delich, Valentina [colaborador] | Comides, Camilo [traductor].
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Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libros |
Biblioteca San Cristóbal
Texto en la configuración de la biblioteca San Cristóbal |
Acervo General | 346.0482 M8 | Disponible | ECO010020865 |
Incluye bibliografía: páginas 113-114 e índice: páginas 131-144
List of Figures.. Preface.. Acknowledgements.. Introduction: The Bauplan.. Chapter 1 Looking the Gorgon in the Face: The Ubiquity of Propaganda and the Business of Debate.. Chapter 2 Museums as Venues for Polemics: Exhibits that Provoke Controversy, Argumentation or Refutation.. Chapter 3 The Museum as a Vehicle for Considered Judgments on Access and Benefit Sharing.. Chapter 4 Clearing the Air: Applying the Intellectual Property Framework to National, Community, and Individual Rights in The Convention on Biological Diversity.. Chapter 5 The Anti-Commons Threat to Farmers' Rights: The Case of Crop Germplasm.. Chapter 6 The Moral Foundations of Intellectual Property and Conservation through Access and Benefit-Sharing. Conclusions: The Nameless Interloper in The Museum of Bioprospecting, Intellectual Property, and the Public Domain.. Appendix: The Original Essay: A Proposal Based on he Tragedy of the Commons: Museum of Bioprospecting, Intellectual Property Rights, and the Public Domain.. Notes.. Index
The Museum of Bioprospecting, Intellectual Property, and the Public Domain’ addresses one of the most pressing policy issues of our day: intellectual property rights versus the public domain in facilitating access to genetic resources for biotechnology development. The issue is examined in the context of a proposal submitted by seven fictional scholars to an imaginary octogenarian, whose humor provides an original addition to the discussion. eng