Article
Knowledge commons: an alternative to proprietary knowledge
Fecha
2017Autor
Ambrosi De la Cadena, Marco Antonio
Institución
Resumen
Intellectual property (IP) has become a crucial factor in scientific knowledge production which is based
predominantly on profits and market relations facilitated by Intellectual property rights (IPRs). The
result of this production is a ‘proprietary knowledge’, i.e. an over-patented knowledge which cannot be
legally used or produced without the right holder’s consent. This work aims to ‘reopen’ the debate about
IP recalling the ‘knowledge commons’ argument in order to affirm a diversity of ownership definitions,
e.g. individual, multiple, collaborative, communitarian and public. The article introduces a brief analyse
about the philosophy underlying IP – from authors such as Locke, Hegel and Marx – for a critical
appraisal of theoretical and social aspects of knowledge property. The discussion presented about
contemporary IP and its consequences for scientific production, includes the study of a biopiracy case
involving the Waoranis, an Ecuadorean indigenous community, as an example of the ‘over-patenting’
of life and knowledge. Thus, in favour of the ‘knowledge commons’ argument, the paradigmatic case
about the donation of the malaria vaccine patent is revised to show that it is possible to organise a
scientific production guided by alternative criteria. The methodology used was the critical revision of
primary bibliography and academic literature.