http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/item/default.asp?ttype=2&tid=11012


Understanding Knowledge as a Commons
*From Theory to Practice*
Edited by Charlotte
Hess<http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=33156>and
Elinor
Ostrom <http://mitpress.mit.edu/catalog/author/default.asp?aid=224>


Knowledge in digital form offers unprecedented access to information through
the Internet but at the same time is subject to ever-greater restrictions
through intellectual property legislation, overpatenting, licensing,
overpricing, and lack of preservation. Looking at knowledge as a commons—as
a shared resource—allows us to understand both its limitless possibilities
and what threatens it. In *Understanding Knowledge as a Commons*, experts
from a range of disciplines discuss the knowledge commons in the digital
era—how to conceptualize it, protect it, and build it.

Contributors consider the concept of the commons historically and offer an
analytical framework for understanding knowledge as a shared
social-ecological system. They look at ways to guard against enclosure of
the knowledge commons, considering, among other topics, the role of research
libraries, the advantages of making scholarly material available outside the
academy, and the problem of disappearing Web pages. They discuss the role of
intellectual property in a new knowledge commons, the open access movement
(including possible funding models for scholarly publications), the
development of associational commons, the application of a free/open source
framework to scientific knowledge, and the effect on scholarly communication
of collaborative communities within academia, and offer a case study of
EconPort, an open access, open source digital library for students and
researchers in microeconomics. The essays clarify critical issues that arise
within these new types of commons—and offer guideposts for future theory and
practice.

*Contributors*: David Bollier, James Boyle, James C. Cox, Shubha Ghosh,
Charlotte Hess, Nancy Kranich, Peter Levine, Wendy Pradt Lougee, Elinor
Ostrom, Charles Schweik, Peter Suber, J. Todd Swarthout, Donald Waters

*About the Editors*

Charlotte Hess is Director of the Digital Library of the Commons at Indiana
University.

Elinor Ostrom is Arthur F. Bentley Professor of Political Science,
Codirector of the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at
Indiana University, and Codirector of the Center for the Study of
Institutions, Population, and Environmental Change (CIPEC) at Indiana
University.
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