Expanding intellectual property : copyrights and patents in twentieth-century Europe and beyond /
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Imprint: | Budapest ; New York : Central European University Press, 2017. ©2017 |
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Description: | 315 pages ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Leipzig studies on the history and culture of East Central Europe ; vol. 4 Leipzig studies on the history and culture of East-Central Europe ; v. 4. |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11309134 |
Table of Contents:
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- I. The Institutionalization of Intellectual Property Rights between National and International Contexts
- 1. Intellectual Property Rights and the Dynamics of Propertization, Nationalization, and Globalization in Modern Cultures and Economies
- 2. Power and Development: The Revision Conferences of 1967 and 1971 of the Berne Convention and the Universal Copyright Convention
- 3. Legal Designs: Danish Designers as Court-Appointed Experts and the Expansion of the Concept of Copyright
- 4. Intellectual Property and Competition Policy: Patent Pooling and Industrial Concentration in Germany (1890-1930)
- 5. The Melting Pot of Copyright Law: Urheberrecht in Jerusalem
- 6. "Aryanization" Expanded? Patent Rights of Jews under the Nazi Regime
- II. Socialism: Copyright between System and Defiance
- 7. Copyright in the German Democratic Republic and the International Copyright Regime
- 8. From State Governance to Self-Management: Culture and Intellectual Property Rights in Communist Yugoslavia
- 9. Samizdat, Copyright, and the State: Copyright as Censorship and the Differences between East and West
- III. Postsocialism: Renegotiating Copyright Norms in Europe
- 10. The Influence of EU Copyright Harmonization Directives on the Construction of Postsocialist Copyright Law in Central and Eastern Europe
- 11. A New Concept in an Old Context: The Legal Framework of the Transformation of Intellectual Property in Macedonia after the Dissolution of Yugoslavia
- 12. Opposing the Expansion of Copyright Law: Social Norms in the Quest against ACTA and the "Commodification of Knowledge and Culture Project"
- List of Contributors
- Index
- List of Figures
- Figure 4.1. Blue fluted china coffee pot
- Figure 4.2. Marcel Brevier's chair S 32 (1929/30)
- Figure 4.3. Tripp Trapp high chair designed by Peter Opsvik and the 2-step chair produced by the Tvilum Møbelfabrik