Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools

The past three decades have witnessed a period of great turbulence in the economies of biological knowledge, during which there has been great uncertainty as to how and where boundaries could be drawn between public or private knowledge especially with regard to the explosive growth in biological da...

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Main Authors: Mark Harvey, Andrew McMeekin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services) 2009-12-01
Series:International Journal of the Commons
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/144
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spelling doaj-64540f23f7794822ac501d41c9aa965f2020-11-25T02:48:52ZengUtrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)International Journal of the Commons1875-02812009-12-014148150610.18352/ijc.14480Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics toolsMark Harvey0Andrew McMeekin1Department of Sociology, University of Essex, UKInstitute of Innovation Research and Sustainable Consumption InstituteThe past three decades have witnessed a period of great turbulence in the economies of biological knowledge, during which there has been great uncertainty as to how and where boundaries could be drawn between public or private knowledge especially with regard to the explosive growth in biological databases and their related bioinformatic tools. This paper will focus on some of the key software tools developed in relation to bio-databases. It will argue that bioinformatic tools are particularly economically unstable, and that there is a continuing tension and competition between their public and private modes of production, appropriation, distribution, and use. The paper adopts an 'instituted economic process' approach, and in this paper will elaborate on processes of making knowledge public in the creation of 'public goods'. The question is one of continuously creating and sustaining new institutions of the commons. We believe this critical to an understanding of the division and interdependency between public and private economies of knowledge.https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/144public goodsmarkets for knowledgeinstituted economic processcommonspublic domainopen-source software
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mark Harvey
Andrew McMeekin
spellingShingle Mark Harvey
Andrew McMeekin
Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
International Journal of the Commons
public goods
markets for knowledge
instituted economic process
commons
public domain
open-source software
author_facet Mark Harvey
Andrew McMeekin
author_sort Mark Harvey
title Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
title_short Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
title_full Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
title_fullStr Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
title_full_unstemmed Public or private economies of knowledge: The economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
title_sort public or private economies of knowledge: the economics of diffusion and appropriation of bioinformatics tools
publisher Utrecht University Library Open Access Journals (Publishing Services)
series International Journal of the Commons
issn 1875-0281
publishDate 2009-12-01
description The past three decades have witnessed a period of great turbulence in the economies of biological knowledge, during which there has been great uncertainty as to how and where boundaries could be drawn between public or private knowledge especially with regard to the explosive growth in biological databases and their related bioinformatic tools. This paper will focus on some of the key software tools developed in relation to bio-databases. It will argue that bioinformatic tools are particularly economically unstable, and that there is a continuing tension and competition between their public and private modes of production, appropriation, distribution, and use. The paper adopts an 'instituted economic process' approach, and in this paper will elaborate on processes of making knowledge public in the creation of 'public goods'. The question is one of continuously creating and sustaining new institutions of the commons. We believe this critical to an understanding of the division and interdependency between public and private economies of knowledge.
topic public goods
markets for knowledge
instituted economic process
commons
public domain
open-source software
url https://www.thecommonsjournal.org/articles/144
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