Via Sean Flynn: Following the Jaszi Lecture featuring Christopher Sprigman on the evening of November 1,
PIJIP will be hosting the 9th Annual IP-Gender symposium the morning
of November 2 – featuring a roundtable discussion of some of the themes raised
in The Knockoff Economy (details below).
Please join the roundtable by registering: Nov 2: The Ninth Annual IP/Gender: Creativity Outside of
Intellectual Property's Domain
How are conflicts around competing uses of an image, a
method, or a form of words resolved when copyright, patent and trademark don’t
provide good answers? The topic of the 2012 IP/Gender workshop will be “IP
without IP – when women rule.” In a roundtable discussion on the morning on
Friday, November 2, we will explore gendered perspectives on the norm-based
regulation of information ownership and use with specific communities of
practice, and generate a research agenda for further inquiry. The general
subject of how informal norms operate in domains where IP law and such doesn’t
apply, or isn’t applied, is the subject of an interesting and growing
literature. However, most of this work has been with self-regulating fields
where authority genders strongly male: magic, comedy, haut cuisine, etc. The
goal of this workshop is to stimulate thinking about this phenomenon as it may
applied in communities where women practitioners are (or could be)
norm-setters: dance, fan culture, traditional arts, serial and reality
television, Pinterest, fiber art (including weaving, knitting and needlework),
to name a few. The previous evening, November 1, Professor Christopher
Sprigman of the University of Virginia, will deliver WCL’s annual Distinguished
Lecture in Intellectual Property. Professor Sprigman, who has written
extensively about “IP without IP,” will join the workshop discussion on Friday,
as will a number of legal experts, cultural anthropologists, and
practitioners.
Participants:
Peter Jaszi, American University Washington College of
Law
Lorraine Aragon, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Libby Smigel, Dance Heritage Coalition
Rebecca Tushnet, Georgetown University Law School
Christopher Sprigman, University of Virginia Law School
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