Towards a Political Economy of Information: Difference between revisions

From P2P Foundation
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
 
(2 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
'''* Book: Towards a Political Economy of Information. Roberto Verzola.'''
 
Book by [[Roberto Verzola]] and essay by [[Yochai Benkler]]
 
 
=The Book=
 
 
'''* Book. Roberto Verzola.  [[Towards a Political Economy of Information]]: Studies on the Information Economy, Foundation for Nationalist Studies, 2004'''
 


URL = http://rverzola.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/infoeconomy-verzola.pdf
URL = http://rverzola.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/infoeconomy-verzola.pdf
Line 6: Line 14:




=Excerpts=
=Contents=
 
 
The following is the '''table of contents''' of the book:
 
 
'''Part I. Information and Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)'''
 
 
1. The miracle of the loaves
 
2. A new offensive against the Third World
 
3. U.S. piracy in the 19th century
 
4. The “piracy" of intellectuals
 
5. GATT: Free Trade or Monopoly Growth?
 
6. IPR: a clash of value-systems
 
7. Towards a political economy of information
 
 
'''Part II. ICTs and the Internet'''
 
 
8. Expanding market for information economies
 
9. A hierarchy of access
 
10. ICT: job creator or destroyer?
 
11. A poor learning environment
 
12. An interactive idiot box
 
13. Private space controlled by rentiers
 
14. Perverse subsidies
 
15. Internet cafes: connectivity for the masses?
 
 
'''Part III. Genetic Information And Genetic Engineering'''
 
 
16. Turning farmers into “pirates"
 
17. Pirating genetic resources
 
18. Beware of modern vampires
 
19. Biosafety and genetic contamination
 
 
'''Part IV. Monopolistic Information Economies'''
 
 
20. Information monopolies and the WTO
 
21. Globalization: the third wave
 
22. Cyberlords: rentier class of the information sector
 
23. Testing the political strength of a cyberlord
 
24. Globalization: poor design?
 
25. What could be more important than efficiency?
 
 
'''Part V. Alternatives: A Non-Monopolistic Information Sector'''
 
 
26. A well-kept IT secret
 
27. IT or AT?
 
28. Community rights over biological material: property or moral rights?
 
29. Low-cost strategies for ICT deployment in developing countries
 
30. Greening the information sector
 
31. Alternatives to globalization
 
 
==Excerpts==


* Chapter 23: [[Reliability vs Efficiency‎]]
* Chapter 23: [[Reliability vs Efficiency‎]]
* [[Cyberlords as a Rentier Class]]
==The Essay==
* Article: “Freedom in the Commons, Towards a Political Economy of Information,” Duke Law Journal 52 (2003):1249




Line 14: Line 119:


[[Category:IP]]
[[Category:IP]]
[[Category:Articles]]
[[Category:Commons Economics]]
[[Category:Culture]]

Latest revision as of 05:37, 23 December 2012

Book by Roberto Verzola and essay by Yochai Benkler


The Book

* Book. Roberto Verzola. Towards a Political Economy of Information: Studies on the Information Economy, Foundation for Nationalist Studies, 2004


URL = http://rverzola.files.wordpress.com/2008/01/infoeconomy-verzola.pdf

The book analyzes the social impacts of new information and communications technologies (ICT).


Contents

The following is the table of contents of the book:


Part I. Information and Intellectual Property Rights (IPR)


1. The miracle of the loaves

2. A new offensive against the Third World

3. U.S. piracy in the 19th century

4. The “piracy" of intellectuals

5. GATT: Free Trade or Monopoly Growth?

6. IPR: a clash of value-systems

7. Towards a political economy of information


Part II. ICTs and the Internet


8. Expanding market for information economies

9. A hierarchy of access

10. ICT: job creator or destroyer?

11. A poor learning environment

12. An interactive idiot box

13. Private space controlled by rentiers

14. Perverse subsidies

15. Internet cafes: connectivity for the masses?


Part III. Genetic Information And Genetic Engineering


16. Turning farmers into “pirates"

17. Pirating genetic resources

18. Beware of modern vampires

19. Biosafety and genetic contamination


Part IV. Monopolistic Information Economies


20. Information monopolies and the WTO

21. Globalization: the third wave

22. Cyberlords: rentier class of the information sector

23. Testing the political strength of a cyberlord

24. Globalization: poor design?

25. What could be more important than efficiency?


Part V. Alternatives: A Non-Monopolistic Information Sector


26. A well-kept IT secret

27. IT or AT?

28. Community rights over biological material: property or moral rights?

29. Low-cost strategies for ICT deployment in developing countries

30. Greening the information sector

31. Alternatives to globalization


Excerpts


The Essay

  • Article: “Freedom in the Commons, Towards a Political Economy of Information,” Duke Law Journal 52 (2003):1249