Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property

Deviant globalization is a "powerful engine of wealth creation ...[P]articipating in deviant globalization is often an individual’s fastest ticket out of poverty and a way for an entire community to experience economic development.” Although some aspects of deviant globalization undeniably inc...

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Main Author: Doris Estelle Long
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Aalborg Universitetsforlag 2012-01-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
Online Access:https://130.225.53.24/index.php/NJCL/article/view/2990
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spelling doaj-84019dc745dd4292bf08a73835f657bd2021-01-26T14:16:54ZengAalborg UniversitetsforlagNordic Journal of Commercial Law1459-96862012-01-012Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual PropertyDoris Estelle Long Deviant globalization is a "powerful engine of wealth creation ...[P]articipating in deviant globalization is often an individual’s fastest ticket out of poverty and a way for an entire community to experience economic development.” Although some aspects of deviant globalization undeniably include illegal conduct, such “illegality is not necessarily criminal or even unsavory in nature. “Deviant globalization” in the intellectual property arena serves as a powerful force for the creation of revised standards of protection. It serves both a predictive and a normative function. It serves a predictive function because it incorporates the experimental standards we are already witnessing in domestic and international efforts to re-invent intellectual property standards for the 21st Century. It serves a normative function because it creates a new normative standard that incorporates social and economic norms from the informal market into formal normative values against which decisions regarding intellectual property standards can be evaluated and revised. With its emphasis on trade and innovation across socio-economic levels, and its focus on unmet consumer demands, deviant globalization based standards would bring new understandings of the relationship between compensation, access, and distributional innovation in present intellectual property debates. More effective support for distributional innovation under deviant globalization does not require that the needs of intellectual property owners be ignored. However, it does require that their interests be re-balanced with those of sellers and consumers. By focusing on compensation streams, deviant globalization puts the economic viability of piracy into play, not its moral necessity. Regulation is not the enemy of deviant globalization. Irrational regulation is. Some experiments in crafting effective deviant globalization models will undoubtedly fail. Yet even such failures will be useful in recalibrating present international norms so that intellectual property protection can continue to provide the innovative foundation for a vibrant, socially just, global marketplace for the 21st Century. https://130.225.53.24/index.php/NJCL/article/view/2990
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Doris Estelle Long
spellingShingle Doris Estelle Long
Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property
Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
author_facet Doris Estelle Long
author_sort Doris Estelle Long
title Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property
title_short Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property
title_full Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property
title_fullStr Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property
title_full_unstemmed Deviant Globalization: The Next Step in the Multilateral Protection of Intellectual Property
title_sort deviant globalization: the next step in the multilateral protection of intellectual property
publisher Aalborg Universitetsforlag
series Nordic Journal of Commercial Law
issn 1459-9686
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Deviant globalization is a "powerful engine of wealth creation ...[P]articipating in deviant globalization is often an individual’s fastest ticket out of poverty and a way for an entire community to experience economic development.” Although some aspects of deviant globalization undeniably include illegal conduct, such “illegality is not necessarily criminal or even unsavory in nature. “Deviant globalization” in the intellectual property arena serves as a powerful force for the creation of revised standards of protection. It serves both a predictive and a normative function. It serves a predictive function because it incorporates the experimental standards we are already witnessing in domestic and international efforts to re-invent intellectual property standards for the 21st Century. It serves a normative function because it creates a new normative standard that incorporates social and economic norms from the informal market into formal normative values against which decisions regarding intellectual property standards can be evaluated and revised. With its emphasis on trade and innovation across socio-economic levels, and its focus on unmet consumer demands, deviant globalization based standards would bring new understandings of the relationship between compensation, access, and distributional innovation in present intellectual property debates. More effective support for distributional innovation under deviant globalization does not require that the needs of intellectual property owners be ignored. However, it does require that their interests be re-balanced with those of sellers and consumers. By focusing on compensation streams, deviant globalization puts the economic viability of piracy into play, not its moral necessity. Regulation is not the enemy of deviant globalization. Irrational regulation is. Some experiments in crafting effective deviant globalization models will undoubtedly fail. Yet even such failures will be useful in recalibrating present international norms so that intellectual property protection can continue to provide the innovative foundation for a vibrant, socially just, global marketplace for the 21st Century.
url https://130.225.53.24/index.php/NJCL/article/view/2990
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