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At the End of Property

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Recent decades have witnessed the creation of new types of property systems, ranging from data ownership to national control over genetic resources. This trend has significant implications for weal...
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  • 23 July 2024
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Recent decades have witnessed the creation of new types of property systems, ranging from data ownership to national control over genetic resources. This trend has significant implications for wealth distribution and our understanding of who can own what.

This book explores the idea of ownership in the realm of plant breeding, revealing how plants have been legally and materially transformed into property. It highlights the controversial aspects of turning seeds, plants and genes into property and how this endangers the viability of the seed industry.

Examining ownership not simply as a legal concept, but as a bundle of laws, practices and technologies, this is a valuable contribution that will interest scholars of intellectual property studies, the anthropology of markets, science and technology studies and related fields.

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Price: $119.95
Pages: 214
Publisher: Bristol University Press
Imprint: Bristol University Press
Publication Date: 23 July 2024
ISBN: 9781529233667
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SCIENCE / Philosophy & Social Aspects, Impact of science and technology on society, LAW / Intellectual Property / Patent, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Technology Studies, Patents law, Ethical issues: scientific, technological and medical developments
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“This book is accomplished, erudite and provocative. It is a brilliant addition to an ever more important literature on what property means to us all.” Sarah Franklin, University of Cambridge
Veit Braun is Research Associate in the Institute for Sociology at Goethe University Frankfurt am Main.

Chapter 1: Introduction

Chapter 2: From rights to scripts: Articulating property

Chapter 3: Property and the market

Chapter 4: Re-inventing plants

Chapter 5: The values of Patents

Chapter 6: Too much property

Chapter 7: At the end of property