Transnational Copyright: Organization, Mobilization, and Law

Fourth Conference on Economic Sociology and Political Economy
June 12-15, 2010 | Villa Vigoni

 

 

Program

Saturday, June 12


7 p.m. Aperitivo

 
7:30 p.m. Dinner
 

 

Sunday, June 13


9 a.m.
Introduction
Leonhard Dobusch, Sigrid Quack

 

Session I
The complexities of regulating transnational access to cultural goods


9:30 a.m.
National copyrights versus worldwide access
Alexander Peukert

 
Rules of access in copyright law beyond the nation state
Dan Wielsch

 
11 p.m. Coffee

 
11:30 a.m.
The relationship between copyright and contract law
Martin Kretschmer

 
National copyright differences and the international porting of Creative Commons licenses
Melanie Dulong de Rosnay

 
1 p.m. Lunch

 

Session II
Creating and providing content: Practices, norms and copyright


2:30 p.m.
Beyond originality and ownership: Norms in low-IP regimes
Felix Stalder

 
The impact of regulation on innovative processes in the music industry
Peter Tschmuck

 
4 p.m. Coffee

 
4:15 p.m.
Google books: Transforming ownership of literary property
Jeanette Hofmann

 
Knowledge Commons and The Role of Universities
Juan Carlos De Martin

 
Online content distribution and copyright regulation: A European perspective
Maurizio Borghi, Maria Lillá Montagnani

 
End of session 6:30 p.m.

 
7:30 p.m. Dinner

 

 

Monday, June 14


Session III
Shifting politics of copyrights between arenas


9 a.m.
Cat and mouse: Forum-shifting in the battle over intellectual property enforcement
Susan K. Sell

 
Copyright between creativity and exploitation: Transnational mobilization and private regulation
Leonhard Dobusch, Sigrid Quack

 
Arenas and monopolies: Software patents in the U.S. and Europe
Thomas R. Eimer

 
11.15 a.m. Coffee

 

Session IV
Copyright discourse: Situated negotiations


11:30 a.m.
Colonial copyright, postcolonial publics: The 1967 Stockholm Diplomatic Conference and the protocol that came to nothing
Eva Hemmungs Wirtén

 
Transnational change through field-configuring events: The copyright discourse in the German music industry
Leonhard Dobusch, Elke Schüßler

 
1 p.m. Lunch

 

Session V
Intellectual property and political mobilization


2:30 p.m.
A comparison between political claims analysis and discourse network analysis: The case of software patents in the European Union
Philip Leifeld, Sebastian Haunss

 
Communication as participation: The DIY-campaign of Germany´s Piratenpartei
Christoph Bieber

 
End of session 4 p.m.

 
Late afternoon available for a visit to the park of Villa Vigoni or walk to the village and lake

 
7:30 p.m. Dinner

 

 

Tuesday, June 15


Session VI
Organizing alternatives: Non-profit and for profit


10 a.m.
Creative commons as a global network of volunteers
Giorgos Cheliotis

 
Commercial providers of online platforms of participation: Case studies comparison Flickr corporation model and Wikihow enterprise
Mayo Fuster Morell

 
11:30 a.m. Coffee

 
12 a.m.
Concluding discussion and planning next steps
Leonhard Dobusch, Sigrid Quack, Irene Troy

 
1 p.m. Lunch

 
End of conference 2 p.m.

 


MPIfG: Conference "Transnational Copyright: Organization, Mobilization, and Law" | http://www.mpifg.de/projects/Copyright/program_en.asp [Last updated 6/11/2010 13:31]