Ned Rossiter on Thu, 21 Mar 2002 04:04:02 +0100 (CET)
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[Nettime-bold] Intellectual Property Regimes and Indigenous Sovereignty
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Title: Intellectual Property Regimes and Indigenous
Sovereign
[with thanks to nettime over the years for
its grip on IPR; this first encounter for me with writing on IPR will
disclose nothing new to many of you, but perhaps the argument
positions some of the techno-libertarian tracts on open-source in a
different cultural-political relationship/ned]
'Intellectual Property Regimes and the
Possibilty of Indigenous Sovereignty within Informational
Economies'
Ned Rossiter, 18 March 2002
Abstract. This paper situates intellectual property regimes as a
condition of possibility for indigenous sovereignty movements within
Australia. I argue that rational consensus models of democracy
have failed to accommodate the interests of indigenous peoples.
While surpranational entities such as UNESCO have been able to confer
a degree of political legitimacy upon indigenous peoples, I maintain
that this has failed to articulate with the national form in the
process of renationalisation. I suggest that intellectual
property regimes offer an Aboriginal polity the opportunity to
reassert claims for self-determination in the national form in as
much as the political subject of Aboriginality is positioned in the
first instance as an autonomous economic actor as distinct from a
political subject. Such positionality then enables political
and cultural issues to be fashioned within the realm of intellectual
property law, as distinct from an exclusive focus on international
human rights law.
***
In recent years indigenous sovereignty movements in Australia have
achieved some degree of success in supranational fora such as UNESCO,
who have recognised claims of human rights abuse and cultural
heritage violations as legitimate. However, the legitimacy
indigenous people have obtained as partially denationalised political
subjects has failed to articulate with the national form,
particularly under the right wing conservative administration of the
Howard Government. Arguably, the possibility for Aboriginal
sovereignty has reached an impasse within rational consensus models
of democracy, since the claims made by the Aboriginal and Torres
Strait Islander Commission (ATSIC) - the political body that
represents indigenous indigenous interests - constitute an
antagonistic field of practices with respect to the cultural,
ideological and political economy of government and the business and
electoral interests that it represents.
It is precisely this antagonistic dimension of political relations
that constitute the Aboriginal polity as an enemy of the state in so
far as the contemporary liberal democratic form across Western
nation-states is defined by Third Way politics, which functions by
eliding 'the violence that is inherent in sociability' as it seeks to
obtain consensus beyond the traditional oppositions between the Left
and the Right (Mouffe 2000: 134-35; Scanlon 2000). Despite
recent literature on globalisation that suggests the sovereignty of
the nation-state is in decline, the current condition of an
Aboriginal polity indicates that battles over sovereignty are
considerably more complex, with the nation-state better understood as
undergoing a process of transformation rather than
obsolescence. As political philosopher Carl Schmitt (1996)
maintains, 'Sovereign is he who decides on the state of
exception'. Within political discourse, claims by the
Aboriginal polity for self-determination have in many respects come
to occupy a state of exception, a space of exclusion.
As long as indigenous sovereignty movements see land rights as
adjacent to territoriality and the concomitant economic, social and
cultural benefits which flow from this, the nation-state will also
persist as a territorial entity. However, this modern
conjunction between territoriality and sovereignty may in all
likelihood leave indigenous peoples as stateless entities, residing
in a sort of non-place as partially denationalised political
subjects, as their appeal is to an older paradigm of statehood.
The condition of an emerging reconfigured statehood is premeditated
to a certain degree in a number of ATSIC documents, which seek to
establish a basis for sovereignty by addressing the issue of
"digital rights", and the need to instigate intellectual
and cultural property laws and structural reforms pertaining to a
field of informational economies (see ATSIC 1989; ATSIC
1999).
This paper examines the possibility of relative sovereignty for
indigenous Australians within informational economies.
Intellectual property regimes, while dependent on the administrative
capacity of the state, are nevertheless independent to a considerable
degree of the political interests of the state. Furthermore,
intellectual property regimes increasingly operate within
extraterritorial dimensions as the staple of informational economies
is manifest as digital code. I suggest that within such a
network of relations, the political subject of Aboriginality holds
greater purchase on the state, since Aboriginality, as a sign of
social practice, is positioned as an economic actor within the realm
of intellectual property law, as distinct from the denationalised
realm of international human rights law. Arguably, the
potential for a process of renationalisation is greater, since the
moral, cultural and political values associated with international
human rights law, and the threat they pose to the habitus of the
state, do not prevail to any great extent within codes of
intellectual property law. At the same time, this presents a
different challenge for an Aboriginal polity that seeks to maintain
the specific material conditions of Aboriginal cultural life as that
which also pertains to concepts of intellectual property. As
Christine Morris and Michael Meadows (2000: 213) argue, 'the concept
of intellectual property has been a defining characteristic of
Indigenous culture from the beginning. It determines
intellectual property rights and responsibilities, identity, and each
person's place in society in relation to the [customary] law'.
'Because informationalism is based on the technology of knowledge and
information', writes Manual Castells (1996: 18), 'there is a
specially close link between culture and productive forces, between
spirit and matter, in the informational mode of development'.
John Frow (2000) offers important qualifications to Castells'
conceptualisation of informationalism, arguing that information is
embodied as knowledge once it is articulated with social needs, and
manifests in a variety of forms that are governed by regimes of value
and techniques of control. Frow writes:
'I understand information to be any organization of matter-energy,
and I assume that it is not necessarily representational in
form. Knowledge would then be a higher level of information
'that has been systematized and integrated, organized so that it is
relevant to natural and social processes'. In the domain of
production, it takes the form of embodied skills, of organization of
the production process, of the design of tools or machinery, of
scientific knowledge about materials, of software algorithms, of
techniques of use of materials, and of reflexive control of processes
and of agents. The attribution of value to knowledge, which
underpins the changes that Castells, like many others, describes, is
closely bound with its functions of control.' (177)
As Edward Herman and Robert McChesney (1997: 51) note, 'Along with
pharmaceuticals, media and computer software are the primary topics
for global intellectual property rights negotiations'.[1] The
World Trade Organization (WTO) is a key player within intellectual
property regimes. The WTO's Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects
of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) in 1995 sought to protect the
commercial interests of Western pharmaceutical and media companies
from countries, most notably China and Africa, engaged in software
piracy and abuse of copyright and patent law. The TRIPS
agreement sets out minimum standards for how member states engage
with copyright, patents (including plant variety protection),
trademarks, geographical indications, industrial designs, and
undisclosed information such as trade secrets.[2] Critics of
the TRIPS agreement have also pointed out 'that transnational
corporations own approximately 90% of technology and product patents
in the world, and up to 80% of technology and product patents in
developing countries' (Dommen 2002: 26).
Essentially, the TRIPS agreement can be seen to inscribe a regime of
scarcity upon that which is otherwise undiminished through
distribution in order to endow a digital product, for instance, with
exchange value within informational economies. Thus it is
fairly easy to anticipate the techno-civil libertarian response to
proponents of intellectual property rights: within a commercial
global media complex characterised by monopoly ownership and flexible
production, intellectual property rights as manifest in copyright and
patent law are seen as restricting access to cultural forms that had
previously existed as part of the public commons. Furthermore,
the notion of proprietary control of immaterial forms such as
information and knowledge is considered to drastically diminish the
potential for the reproduction of creativity and innovation. As
Frow (2000: 183) writes: 'a private property regime imposes potential
limitations on the extent to which cultural material can be freely
used and transformed'. All intellectual property has impacts on
reproduction, and there are very long-standing treaties in the area
of copyright like the Berne Convention, which has been through
various revisions since the late 1800s. So, while the effect of
the TRIPS agreement is not new, it accentuates the restrictions on
the use of cultural material into the realm of informational
societies. The privatisation of the public commons also results
in the removal of public accountability mechanisms, further
alienating the democratic potential of the internet, which is the
primary medium for the distribution of digital
products.
Intellectual property regimes have been contested by numerous
entities, including open source movements, particularly those
involved in software development, which depends on the collective
intelligence of and labour upon a source distributed through computer
networks in order to refine and improve upon the source code of a
particular software program (see Stalder 1999, 2000, 2001a, 2001b;
Fibreculture; Nettime; Open Flows; Pfaffenberger 2001).
However, while these are arguments and practices that I would
support, they are not principles that can be applied in universal
terms. One key and surprising aspect often overlooked in
techno-libertarian tracts on open source distribution concerns the
way in which the cultural technology of the net - its capacity to
distribute and share information within a gift economy - is assumed
to correspond to universal access and the maintenance of a democratic
civil society. That is, the problematic of cultural capital and
the necessary institutional supports that endow actors with the
requisite cultural knowledge and skills to access information is
rarely, if ever, taken into consideration. To unequivocally
uphold all critical rebuttals of intellectual property regimes would
overlook the ways in which intellectual property rights, when
balanced between economic interests and public access, enable
indigenous peoples and people in developing countries the potential
to secure their cultural and intellectual resources within network or
informational societies.
The sort of rights the Aboriginal polity seeks to obtain vis-à-vis
self-determination and relative autonomy can, it would seem, operate
to certain degrees within informational modes of production.
Moreover, in pursuing intellectual property rights, an Aboriginal
polity would, I think, be more strongly articulated with the
nation-state as it too undergoes transformation at extraterritorial,
immaterial levels via the discursive, legalistic, security and
commercial regimes of intellectual property. Micro technologies
of control, surveillance and regulation of the internet in the form
of server protocols, cookies, authentication codes and software -
what Lawrence Lessig (1999) calls the architecture of the net - that
monitor user practices have brought nation-states into partnerships
with each other as they seek to maintain databases and information
networks that store information on clients and "citizens"
within their territories (see Castells 2001). This sort of
sharing of power between states for security and economic purposes is
an example of what Martin Shaw (2000: 185-91) calls a
"pooling" of sovereignty - a mode of economic as distinct
from juridical sovereignty in which states have adjusted to the new
techniques of control within informational societies, operating
through mutual affirmation and legitimacy conditioned by overlapping
interests. Corporations in turn have depended on such pooled
sovereignty by nation-states, and the regulatory practices of
nation-states themselves, as a mechanism by which the protection of
intellectual property rights can be enforced by way of accessing
information regarding intellectual property violations. Current
developments in encryption methods by corporations embed code with
default boundaries, further ensuring the territorialisation and
regionalisation of intellectual property with copy-protection code of
CDs, DVDs and software, for example, that registers infringements to
property ownership as it occurs within the space of that nation (see
Stalder 2001b; Sassen 2000). Hence offences can, in theory, be
tracked and then prosecuted under national law as it corresponds to
minimum standards of protection set out in the TRIPS agreement.
Examples such as these evidence the ways in which the sovereignty of
the nation-state is undergoing reconfiguration within an
informational plane of abstraction.
Within this strange context, I would suggest that claims for
Aboriginal sovereignty hold greater potential since political
legitimacy can be better obtained from the position of being an
economic actor operating on the same plane of abstraction as the
corporate-nation-state nexus. In this sort of arrangement, an
Aboriginal polity is not in the first instance articulated with
property ownership in the form of land and ocean rights; rather, the
political subject of Aboriginality is situated as an actor with
proprietary rights in the form of cultural heritage and its
mediatisation, ecological and biological knowledge.
Intellectual property translates into commodity objects whose form is
decoupled from the moral, legal and proprietary discourses associated
with the quest for indigenous sovereignty in the denationalised realm
of human rights law, which, for the most part, has failed to
articulate with the liberal democratic frame of the nation-state
precisely because rational consensus models of democracy have proven
to be inadequate in accommodating a plurality of
interests.
While such a potential for Aboriginal sovereignty may seem
exclusively extraterritorial and hence politically ineffective, it
still operates at a territorial level within the bounds of the
national form since intellectual property regimes work to reinforce
national borders by encoding the equivalent of scarcity into
informational economies. Remuneration from the commercial use
of indigenous intellectual property could then be redirected to meet
the social and economic needs of the communities that initiated that
transferral of culture and knowledge into the electronic form of
digitally encoded information, for instance. In so doing, an
Aboriginal polity becomes articulated with modalities of economic
sovereignty, as distinct from the mythic figure of popular
sovereignty and the politically inoperative legitimacy granted by
human rights law. However, there are considerable concessions
that come with such an approach to the problematic of indigenous
sovereignty, and I will conclude by briefly addressing some of the
issues.
This very rough sketch of how claims for Aboriginal sovereignty might
proceed within an informational economy overlooks the many
complexities that attend debates, policies, technological capacities
and cultural practices within the field of intellectual property
regimes. A primary issue within intellectual property rights
that is immediately at odds with the principles of indigenous
sovereignty concerns the conceptual and legalistic limitations of
Western models of intellectual property where primacy of the
individual in the form of authorship is granted over the collective
(see Dommen 2002; Frow 1997). As stated in an ATSIC submission
on intellectual property rights to UNESCO:
'Intellectual property laws do not protect the communal rights of
indigenous peoples, nor do they allow for protection in
perpetuity. Intellectual property laws are based on individual
rights, and emphasise economic over cultural rights. These laws
focus on a single, identifiable creator or author, whereas in
indigenous communities rights and interests in intellectual creations
are more diffuse. They are distributed and managed throughout
the community in complex ways according to ritual, socio-political,
kinship and affinal relationships'. (Thomas 1999: 6)
This document, prepared by the Indigenous Cultural and Intellectual
Property Task Force, can been seen here to essentialise that which
constitutes an ontological condition of Aboriginality. While
there is a well documented history of the experiences of alienation
by indigenous peoples from a Western metaphysics of individualism,
contemporary indigenous subjectivity nevertheless traverses both the
specificity of Aboriginal cultural heritage as well as cultural
paradigms and institutional settings of non-indigenous society.
Yet this sort of reduction of Aboriginality to a communal identity is
precisely the sort of tactical move that needs to be made in the
language game of supranational politics and international
intellectual property law in so far as it preserves some of the key
principles of Aboriginal sovereignty.
This ATSIC submission is notable for a number of other reasons, a key
one being the recognition of the place of intellectual property
issues within informational economies well before the popular uptake
and commercialisation of the internet. ATSIC very strategically
seeks in that document to pursue customary law that maintains
specific cultural practices at territorial levels, but it does so
within an extraterritorial framework of economic sovereignty and
intellectual property law. In so doing, an Aboriginal polity
may, it seems, have stronger purchase on the state than it would if
human rights law remained the exclusive avenue through which
indigenous sovereignty was pursued. The process for undertaking
such a multilayered sociopolitical formation is outlined in the
following way:
'Since indigenous cultural and intellectual property is defined,
managed and controlled in accordance with customary law, it may be
argued that the development of effective standards should focus on
protecting customary laws *in the first instance* - on the assumption
that recognition and protection of intangible heritage can then flow
from that as a consequence of the recognition of customary law'.
(Thomas 1999: 5-6. Italics added)
Since the time of this submission in 1989, an Aboriginal polity has
been legitimated within UNESCO fora. But the legitimacy granted
within a denationalised realm of human rights law has failed to
articulate with the national form. Hence, one potentially
useful strategy for Aboriginal sovereignty would be to reverse this
process, and seek recognition of customary law within the
nation-state once intellectual and cultural property rights have been
secured. In so doing, an Aboriginal polity is operating well
and truly within the dominant neoliberal paradigm which sees the
welfare state further eroded. Although this is not a foregone
conclusion. Maybe the relationship between the state and the
social can be reconstituted in the process of negotiation that
attends the status of becoming a legitimate political and economic
actor within the supranational realms of both human rights fora such
as UNESCO and entities such as the WTO that set the agendas for trade
agreements in informational economies. It is within the
encounter between denationalised corporations, extraterritorial
dimensions of statehood, and the partially denationalised political
subject of Aboriginality, along with the manner in which this
encounter is then materialised in the national form that conditions
for what Chantal Mouffe (2000) terms an 'agonistic democracy' might
then emerge.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Andrew Kenyon, Marcia Langton and Geert Lovink
for directing my reading on intellectual property regimes.
Notes
1 For a history of intellectual property law, see Susan Sell
and Christopher May (2001). A particularly helpful resource on
intellectual property law can be found on the Center for the Public
Domain site, http://www.centerforthepublicdomain.org/ip.htm
2 For an outline of intellectual property regimes as they figure
within the TRIPS agreement, see the following WTO documents:
'Intellectual Property: Protection and Enforcement',
http://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/whatis_e/tif_e/agrm6_ehtm and 'Overview: the TRIPS Agreement',
http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/intel2_e.htm
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