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Silent Theft
The Private Plunder of Our Common Wealth
von David Bollier
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
Gebundene Ausgabe
ISBN: 978-0-415-93264-6
Erschienen am 15.03.2002
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 234 mm [H] x 161 mm [B] x 25 mm [T]
Gewicht: 553 Gramm
Umfang: 272 Seiten

Preis: 64,50 €
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Klappentext
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Biografische Anmerkung

Until a 1998 federal court decision, a Minnesota publisher claimed a monopoly on access to all federal court decisions. A Texas company recently filed a patent on a kind of rice grown in India for centuries. Other businesses now claim ownership of mathematical algorithms embedded in software, valuable public lands acquired for five dollars an acre, and icebergs that they plan to transport and sell as fresh water.
In Silent Theft, David Bollier argues that a great untold story of our time is the staggering privatization and abuse of our common wealth. Corporations are engaged in a relentless plunder of dozens of resources that we collectively own-publicly funded medical breakthroughs, software innovation, the airwaves, the public domain of creative works, and even the DNA of plants, animals and humans. Too often, however, our government turns a blind eye-or sometimes helps give away our assets.
Amazingly, the silent theft of our shared wealth has gone largely unnoticed because we have lost our ability to see the commons. Spooling out one outrageous story after another, Bollier skillfully weaves together debates about the Internet, the environment, biotechnology, and the communications revolution. His fresh and compelling critique illuminates a rarely explored landscape in our political and cultural life.
Crisp and revelatory, Silent Theft is a bold attempt to develop a new language of the commons and, in the face of a market order that knows no bounds, to outline an ambitious new project for reclaiming our common wealth.



1. Reclaiming the Narrative of the Commons 2. The Stubborn Vitality of the Gift Economy 3. When Markets Enclose the Commons 4. Enclosing the Commons of Nature 5. The Colonization of Frontier Commons 6. The Abuse of the Public's Natural Resources 7. Can the Internet Commons Be Saved? 8. The Privatization of Public Knowledge 9. Enclosing the Academic Commons 10. The Commercialization of Culture and Public Spaces 11. The Giveaway of Federal Drug Research and Information Resources 12. The Commons: Another Kind of Property 13. Strategies for Protecting the Commons



David Bollier has worked for twenty years as a journalist, activist, and public policy analyst. He is Senior Fellow at the Norman Lear Center at the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Director of the Information Commons Project at the New America Foundation. He is also co-founder of Public Knowledge, a public-interest advocacy organization dedicated to defending the commons of the Internet, science and culture.


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