Historically, Indigenous artistic, cultural, and societal expression has been identified and examined within Canadian or international legal regimes. This book identifies Indigenous intellectual property concerns as an Indigenous legal issue to be taken seriously within specific Indigenous legal orders. Indigenous Intellectual Property opens up complex discussions about existing Indigenous intellectual property law, and avoids the tendency to pigeonhole Indigenous intellectual property into a Western legal model.

Drawing on diverse case studies, this book considers the existing laws in the Gitxsan, Secwepemc, and Hupacasath (Nuu-chah-nulth) legal orders, as well as from the Solomon Islands and Hawai’i. The case studies are grounded in their respective legal and oral histories, and contextualized within a broader discussion of Indigenous law, addressing issues of colonial myths, shrinking conceptions of Indigenous law, common resistances to Indigenous property and law, and important connections between Indigenous law and governance and citizenship.

The book carefully considers how the governance and civic value of intellectual property points to the unsuitability of the current state and international intellectual property legal regimes to many Indigenous intellectual property concerns. Ultimately, Indigenous Intellectual Property reveals the various ways in which to identify and understand law within Indigenous societies – through narrative and story analysis, observations of practices and ceremonies, and political and legal ordering.

Les mer
This book examines Indigenous intellectual property as a legal matter rooted in and operating within distinct Indigenous legal frameworks.

Introduction
 
1. The Octopus: What Might Constitute Indigenous Intellectual Property
Val Napoleon

2. Secwepemc Law of Intellectual Property
Debra McKenzie

3. A People of Themselves: Some Field Notes on Gitxsan Law
Richard Overstall

4. Owning the hula?
Debra McKenzie

5. Conversational Flows: Indigenous Property in the Law School Lounge
Rebecca Johnson

Les mer
“This book charts an intriguing path through Indigenous intellectual property issues from authors at the forefront of the Indigenous law revitalization movement. Beyond constituting simply a subset – ‘cultural property’ – of Western intellectual property categories and their standard economic framing, the artefacts, performances, and know-how considered here are understood as playing crucial governance roles within evolving legal orders. The authors use stories and other materials from five Indigenous nations to draw out the legal logics in which creative products participate, redrawing the ‘clash’ of intellectual property paradigms as interjurisdictional problems to be confronted in practical ways. The chapters provide varied case studies ideal for teaching materials or for those seeking to deepen their understanding of how the ‘intergenerational conversation’ around Indigenous intellectual property is evolving in context.”
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781487558222
Publisert
2024-12-23
Utgiver
University of Toronto Press
Vekt
260 gr
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
10 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
176

Biografisk notat

Val Napoleon is a professor, the director of the Indigenous Law Research Unit, and the Law Foundation Chair of Indigenous Justice and Governance in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria.

Rebecca Johnson is a professor of law and the associate director of the Indigenous Law Research Unit in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria.

Richard Overstall is a lawyer with a particular interest acting for indigenous groups constituted under their own laws.

Debra McKenzie is a research coordinator in the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria.