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\def\WIPO{World Intellectual Property Organisation}
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Property rights, indigenous people and the developing world : issues from aboriginal entitlement to intellectual ownership rights / by David Lea.
2008
N 637 LEA.P
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
Property rights, indigenous people and the developing world : issues from aboriginal entitlement to intellectual ownership rights / by David Lea.
Description
vii, 296 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9789004166943
9789047433453 electronic book
9047433459 electronic book
9004166947 hardback
1282398873
9781282398870
9786612398872
6612398876
9789047433453 electronic book
9047433459 electronic book
9004166947 hardback
1282398873
9781282398870
9786612398872
6612398876
Alternate Call Number
N 637 LEA.P
Summary
Offering an analysis of the Western formal system of private property, this book explains the relevance of the institution to issues facing aboriginal peoples. It includes: aboriginal land claims; third world development; intellectual property rights; and the TRIPs agreement (Trade related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights).
Note
Aboriginal entitlement and conservative theory. Individual autonomy, group self-determination and the assimilation of indigenous cultures. Shareholder wealth maximization, multinational corporations and the developing world. Tully and de Soto on uniformity and diversity. Customary land tenure and communal holdings. Custom as law. Papua New Guinea and the legal methods for maintaining customary land tenure. Customary land tenure in Fiji : a questionable colonial legacy. The expansion and restructuring of intellectual property and its implications for the developing world. The myth of free markets : intellectual property the IT industry, and market freedom in the global arena. From the Wright Brothers to Microsoft : issues in the moral grounding of intellectual property rights. A delicate balance : the right to health care, IP rights in pharmaceuticals and TRIPS compliance. Rights and genetic material in agriculture and human research : two forms of biopiracy?
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 281-291) and index.
Formatted Contents Note
I. Aboriginal entitlement and conservative theory; II. Individual autonomy, group self-determination and the assimilation of indigenous cultures; III. Shareholder wealth maximization, multinational corporations and the developing world; IV. Tully and de soto on uniformity and diversity; V. Customary land tenure and communal holdings; VI. Custom as law; VII. Papua New Guinea and the legal methods for maintaining customary land tenure; VIII. Customary land tenure in Fiji: A questionable colonial legacy; IX. The expansion and restructuring of intellectual property and Its implications for the developing world; X. The myth of free markets: intellectual property the IT industry, and market freedoms in the global arena; XI. From the wright brothers to microsoft: Issues in the moral grounding of intellectual property rights; XII. A delicate balance: The right to health care, IP rights in pharmaceuticals and TRIPS compliance; XIII. Rights and genetic material in agriculture and human research: two forms of biopiracy?
Published
Leiden : Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2008.
Language
English
Record Appears in
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