Prof. Brett
Frischmann will discuss Governing
Knowledge Commons, which will
be published by Oxford University Press in July
2014.
"Knowledge commons"
describes the institutionalized community
governance of the sharing and, in some cases,
creation, of information, science, knowledge,
data, and other types of intellectual and
cultural resources. It is the subject of
enormous recent interest and enthusiasm with
respect to policymaking about innovation,
creative production, and intellectual property.
Taking that enthusiasm as its starting point,
Governing Knowledge Commons argues that
policymaking should be based on evidence and a
deeper understanding of what makes commons
institutions work. It offers a systematic way to
study knowledge commons, borrowing and building
on Elinor Ostrom's Nobel Prize-winning research
on natural resource commons. It proposes a
framework for studying knowledge commons that is
adapted to the unique attributes of knowledge
and information, describing the framework in
detail and explaining how to put it into context
both with respect to commons research and with
respect to innovation and information policy.
Eleven detailed case studies apply and discuss
the framework exploring knowledge commons across
a wide variety of scientific and cultural
domains.
This seminar is
organized in cooperation with the Joint Research
Activity on "Governance, Regulation and
Standards" of the EINS European
Network of Excellence in Internet Science .