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[Announcements] "The Contested Commons/ Trespassing Publics" - Public Lectu: msg#00055culture.india.sarai.reader
"The Contested Commons/ Trespassing Publics" - *Public Lecture Series* The Public Service Broadcasting Trust, the Sarai Programme of the CSDS, Delhi and Alternative Law Forum, Bangalore present a series of three public lectures by world renowned scholars, which examine the fate of the commons after new conflicts over the public domain, and intellectual property. I. 6th January, 2005 Thursday, 7 pm, Auditorium, India Habitat Center, Lodi Road, Delhi * "Between Anarchy and Oligarchy: The Prospects for Sovereignty and Democracy in a Connected World "* Prof. Siva Vaidyanathan, New York University Information communication technologies have collapsed distances and lowered the price of connections and transactions around the world. We have only just begun making sense of the changes wrought by the new methods and habits fostered by these technologies. But we have no shortage of grand, totalizing visions that aim to capture the changes we are experiencing. In the 1990s we went through a phase dominated by naive visions of globalized monoculture and consensus, with the "end of history" considered to be the apex of "cultural evolution." Since 2001 the world has been viewed by some (Bush and Bin Laden, chiefly) as torn among "Civilizations." Now we hear explicit calls for a new Western imperialism, based on assumptions of universal benevolence. In opposition to such panicked or triumphal calls for a New World Order, Antonio Negri and Michael Hardt have issued a description of a new global anarchistic state of mind ("Empire" and "Multitude") based on the emerging forms of opposition to the mainstream forms of globalized corporate centralization. This paper finds fault with both Bush and Negri. It argues that efforts to create a world polarized on models of oligarchy and anarchy do not enrich most lives in meaningful ways. Instead, this paper argues for a careful consideration of the democratic potential of the new information ecosystems, and points out specific points of hope and models of optimism that can guide our global future toward a more just state, opening possibilities without sacrificing the granularity of the local, the specific, and the experimental. Siva Vaidyanathan is a well-known cultural historian, media scholar and public intellectual. . He is the author of the classic Copyrights and Copywrongs: The Rise of Intellectual Property and How it Threatens Creativity (New York University Press, 2001) II. 7th January, 2005 Friday, 7 pm, Auditorium, India Habitat Center, Lodi Road, Delhi * "U.S Path to Wealth and Power: Intellectual Piracy and the making of America" * Prof. Doron Ben-Atar Fordham University During the first decades of America's existence as a nation, private citizens, voluntary associations, and government officials encouraged the smuggling of European inventions and artisans to the New World. These actions openly violated the intellectual property regimes of European nations. At the same time, the young republic was developing policies that set new standards for protecting industrial innovations. The American patent law of 1790 restricted patents exclusively to original inventors and established the principle that prior use anywhere in the world was grounds for invalidating a patent. But the story behind the story is a little more complicated - and leaders of the developing world would be wise to look more closely at how the American system operated in its first 50 years. In theory the United States pioneered a new standard of intellectual property that set the highest possible requirements for patent protection-worldwide originality and novelty. In practice, the country encouraged widespread intellectual piracy and industrial espionage. Piracy took place with the full knowledge and sometimes even aggressive encouragement of government officials. Congress never protected the intellectual property of European authors and inventors, and Americans did not pay for the reprinting of literary works and unlicensed use of patented inventions. What fueled 19th century American boom was a dual system of principled commitment to an intellectual property regime combined with absence of commitment to enforce these laws. This ambiguous order generated innovation by promising patent monopolies. At the same time, by declining to crack down on technology pirates, it allowed for rapid dissemination of innovation that made American products better and cheaper. Doron Ben-Atar is professor of history at Fordham University and co-director of Crossroads of Revolution to Cradle of Reform: Litchfield Connecticut 1751-1833. He has won numerous grants and awards, including most recently from the Dorothy and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York public library. He is the author of numerous articles and a guest speaker on radio and television stations in the New York area. Ben-Atar's books include The Origins of Jeffersonian Commercial Policy and Diplomacy (Macmillan 1993), Federalists Reconsidered (University Press of Virginia, 1998) and Trade Secrets: Intellectual Piracy and the Origins of American Industrial Power (Yale University Press, 2004). III. 8th January, 2005 Saturday, 7 pm, Auditorium, India Habitat Center, Lodi Road, Delhi *"Magna Carta and the Commons"* Peter Linebaugh University of Toledo Magna Carta has been ignored as a medieval document of little relevance to the modern world at best, or at worst it has been derided as a false facade of liberal intention by Anglo imperialism. Partly as a result of this neglect, fundamental protections against tyranny and aggression have been eroded, such as habeas corpus, trial by jury, prohibition of torture, and due process of law. These cannot be restored without the root and branch recovery of the entire Charter of Liberty which includes the Charter of the Forest. This lost but extraordinary document holds a constitutional key to the future of humanity insofar as it provides protections for the whole earth's commons, particularly its hydrocarbon energy resources, whether these take the form of wood, coal, or petroleum. The key is turned by the women of the planet in Chiapas, Nigeria, India (to name a few places) who have taken the lead in the process of re-commoning what has been privatized and profiteered. Hence, the significance of "widow's estovers" in the Magna Carta as revised after 9/11! Peter Linebaugh is Professor of History at the University of Toledo in Ohio. He is the author of The London Hanged, co-author of The Many Headed Hydra, an editor of Albion's Fatal Tree, and forthcoming studies of the Irish insurrectionist, Edward Despard, as well as Magna Carta. He was raised and educated between two empires, British and American. Schooled in London in the 1940s, tested in Cattaraugus (New York) and Muskogee (Oklahoma) during the 1950s, he finished secondary school at the Karachi Grammar School, before matriculating at Swarthmore College, the liberal, Quaker, college in Pennsylvania. Active there in the civil rights struggle, he then removed to Columbia Univesity in New York until anti-war upheavals of May 1968 when, shaking the dust from his feet, he joined E.P. Thompson at the Centre for the Study of Social History at the University of Warwick. An educator who respects the organizer and the agitator, he has published in the Nation, Viet-Report, New Left Review, Times Literary Supplement, Midnight Notes, and his occasional essays may be read on www.CounterPunch. org. - ALL ARE INVITED - _______________________________________________ announcements mailing list announcements@xxxxxxxxx https://mail.sarai.net/mailman/listinfo/announcements _________________________________________ reader-list: an open discussion list on media and the city. Critiques & Collaborations To subscribe: send an email to reader-list-request@xxxxxxxxx with subscribe in the subject header. List archive: <https://mail.sarai.net/pipermail/reader-list/> |
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