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Wiley InterScience | |||||||||
![]() International Social Science JournalVolume 58 Issue 188, Pages 335 - 349 Published Online: 5 Mar 2007 © 2009 UNESCO
Abstract | References | Full Text: HTML, PDF (Size: 357K) | Related Articles | Citation Tracking A framework for analysing the microbiological commons
Elinor Ostrom is the Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Government and Co-Director, Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis, Indiana University. Among their works are "Ideas, facilities and artifacts: information as a common-pool resource", Law and Contemporary Problems, 66 (1–2), 111–146 and Understanding knowledge as a commons: from theory to practice (MIT Press, 2007). Copyright © UNESCO 2006. ABSTRACTIn an earlier article, "Ideas, artifacts and facilities: information as a common-pool resource", we examined the role of collective action in building robust knowledge commons and in circumventing trends of enclosure and privatisation of the intellectual public domain. Our analysis suggested that collective action and new institutional design play as large a part in shaping the collection, distribution, and preservation of scholarly information as do legal restrictions and market forces. The microbiological commons extends well beyond the boundaries of e-prints and other full-text research documents that are the focus of the open access movement. It includes the contents of scientific databases, research archives, and multimedia publications which all need to be seamlessly integrated. In addition, the global, biological commons is also comprised of social networks and social capital. The success of freely sharing microbiological data will require a complex blend of technology, scientific content, metadata standards, open source software packages, negotiated and respected intellectual property rights agreements, sustainability and preservation design mechanisms, evolving rules and institutions, and, ultimately, a firm commitment on the part of providers and users to the common good. |
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