Document Type

Book Chapter

Publication Date

2019

Source Publication

Research Handbook on Critical Legal Theory, edited by Emilios Christodoulidis, Ruth Dukes, & Marco Goldoni, forthcoming 2019, Edward Elgar Publishing

Abstract

Since its explosion late in the twentieth century, the field of intellectual property scholarship has been a vibrant site for critical legal theorizing. Indeed, it is arguable that US-based intellectual property scholarship effectively generated a resurgence or ‘second wave’ of Critical Legal Studies. Exploring critical engagement with the very idea of ‘intellectual property’ and its conceptual counterpart, the ‘public domain,’ this chapter suggests that a vast swath of copyright scholarship that has bloomed over the past few decades, as copyright has expanded in its reach and relevance, builds implicitly or explicitly on insights gleaned from legal realism, Critical Legal Studies, and their intellectual progeny—critical feminism and critical race theory. Moreover, it is argued, these critical approaches to copyright law offer the most challenging and promising route by which to understand, dissect and reshape modern intellectual property structures (and so to resist their seemingly irrepressible growth).

Comments

This is a draft chapter. The final version will be available in Research Handbook on Critical Legal Theory, edited by Emilios Christodoulidis, Ruth Dukes, & Marco Goldoni, forthcoming 2019, Edward Elgar Publishing.

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