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OverviewIn the Information Age, historically marginalized groups and developing nations continue to strive for socio-economic empowerment within the global community. Their ultimate success largely depends upon their ability to develop, protect, and exploit their greatest natural resource: intellectual property. Through an exploration of the techniques used in social entrepreneurship, Intellectual Property, Entrepreneurship and Social Justice provides a framework by which historically marginalized communities and developing nations can cooperate with the developed world to establish a socially cohesive global intellectual property order. The knowledgeable contributors discuss, in four parts, topics surrounding entrepreneurship and empowerment, education and advocacy, engagement and activism and, finally, commencement. Experts in the field, scholars, law professors and students of intellectual property, human rights and international trade and development will find this book to be both thought-provoking and a valuable resource. Contributors: D.M. Conway, S. Ghosh, L.J. Gibbons, M. Gollin, R.S. Heimes, P. Lyfoung, A. McGeehan, C. McNulty, L. Mtima, L.E. Mulraine, J.R. Whitman, V. Rawlston Wilson, P.K. Yu Full Product DetailsAuthor: Lateef MtimaPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd ISBN: 9781783470242ISBN 10: 1783470240 Pages: 320 Publication Date: 27 February 2015 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: Prologue: A Social Activist's Guide to Intellectual Property Lateef Mtima 1. An Introduction to Intellectual Property Social Justice and Entrepreneurship: Civil Rights and Economic Empowerment for the 21st Century Lateef Mtima PART I ENTREPRENEURSHIP AND EMPOWERMENT 2. An Entrepreneurship Approach to Achieving IP Social Justice John R. Whitman 3. Intellectual Property as an Essential 21st Century Business Asset Valerie Rawlston Wilson 4. The Colorblind Marketplace? Shubha Ghosh 5. Public Procurement's Role in Facilitating Social Justice, Entrepreneurship, and Innovation in the Global Knowledge Economy Danielle M. Conway PART II EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY 6. Lawyers and Innovation Rita S. Heimes 7. Intellectual Property Training and Education for Social Justice Peter K. Yu 8. Intellectual Property Social Justice in Action: Public Interest Intellectual Property Advisors Michael Gollin, Pacyinz Lyfoung, Lateef Mtima and Connor McNulty PART III ENGAGEMENT AND ACTIVISM 9. Worth More Dead than Alive: Join the NoCopyright Party and Start Killing Copyrights for their Own Good Ann McGeehan 10. I Am My Brother's Keeper: How the Crossroads of Entrepreneurship, Intellectual Property, and Entertainment Can Be Used to Affect Social Justice Loren E. Mulraine 11. Accentuate the Positive, Eliminate the Negative: Intellectual Property Social Justice and Best Practices for Entrepreneurial Economic Development Llewellyn Joseph Gibbons PART IV COMMENCEMENT 12. From Swords to Ploughshares: Towards a Unified Theory of Intellectual Property Social Justice Lateef Mtima IndexReviews`Professor Lateef Mtima and his stellar list of contributors are onto something genuinely new in this important volume; the idea that the public interest goals of the IP system extend beyond encouraging innovation, to take in a wide range of other social justice interests: promoting economic participation by excluded groups, helping to assure distributional fairness, and enabling significant gestures of cultural preservation. The range of specific topics covered is impressive, and their presentation is at once rigorous and accessible to non-specialist readers. This transformational collection is an essential item for any contemporary IP bookshelf.' -- Peter Jaszi, American University, Washington College of Law, US `While many have articulated needs of particular communities which they argue intellectual property should be shaped to serve, few have attempted to flesh out a theory under which intellectual property doctrine should be built from the ground up to promote social justice. Lateef Mtima, a pioneer in that endeavor, has now edited a collection of essays that provides crucial additional perspectives - perspectives that appropriately focus on empowerment and entrepreneurship. These essays are essential reading for everyone who has ever wondered whether and how intellectual property should respond to an unequal world.' -- Robert Brauneis, The George Washington University, US 'While many have articulated needs of particular communities which they argue intellectual property should be shaped to serve, few have attempted to flesh out a theory under which intellectual property doctrine should be built from the ground up to promote social justice. Lateef Mtima, a pioneer in that endeavor, has now edited a collection of essays that provides crucial additional perspectives - perspectives that appropriately focus on empowerment and entrepreneurship. These essays are essential reading for everyone who has ever wondered whether and how intellectual property should respond to an unequal world.' - Robert Brauneis, The George Washington University, US Author InformationEdited by Lateef Mtima, Professor of Law, Howard University, School of Law, US Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |