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(Sebelumnya) Access Systems Americas, Inc.Accessible publishing (Berikutnya)

Access to knowledge movement

The Access to Knowledge (A2K) movement is a loose collection of civil society groups, governments, and individuals converging on the idea that access to knowledge should be linked to fundamental principles of justice, freedom, and economic development.

Contents

Use by campaign groups

Many different groups refer to the A2K movement. Consumers International is particularly prominent, and defines the movement as:

the umbrella term for a movement that aims to create more equitable public access to the products of human culture and learning. The ultimate objective of the movement is to create a world in which educational and cultural works are accessible to all, and in which consumers and creators alike participate in a vibrant ecosystem of innovation and creativity.
These goals are of interest to a broad coalition of consumer groups, NGOs, activists, Internet users and others. However for many of them, coming to grips with the issues involved in the A2K movement can be daunting. These issues, including copyright and patent law reform, open content licensing, and communications rights, often involve legal and technological concepts that even specialists find difficult.[1]

CP Tech (now Knowledge Ecology International) say: "the A2K (Access to Knowledge) movement takes concerns with copyright law and other regulations that affect knowledge and places them within an understandable social need and policy platform: access to knowledge goods."[2]

A2K Network

Many of the organisations involved in these issues are also part of a network, the A2K Network[3] run by Consumers International.

Declarations and draft treaties

The Berlin Declaration on Open Access to Knowledge in the Sciences and Humanities from 2003 is a major declaration reflecting the goals of the movement in relation to academic publishing.

The wider goals of Access to Knowledge are embodied in a draft treaty, emerging from a call from Brazil and Argentina for a development agenda for the World Intellectual Property Organization.[4] The treaty is intended to ease the transfer of knowledge to developing nations, and to secure the viability of open innovation systems all over the world.[5]

Human rights debate

Access to knowledge and science is protected by Article 27 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The article balances the right of access with a right to protection of moral and material interests:

Article 27 Everyone has the right freely to participate in the cultural life of the community, to enjoy the arts and to share in scientific advancement and its benefits.
Everyone has the right to the protection of the moral and material interests resulting from any scientific, literary or artistic production of which he is the author.

A2K academics argue that “material interests” are not simply equivalent to current intellectual property provisions, not least because these rights are saleable and transferable, and therefore not “inalienable”. The right to access is ultimately the more important part of the right. Current levels of IP protection seem out of balance with Article 27, according to A2K theorists:

“... in a very real sense, rights delayed are rights denied. Had access to oral rehydration therapy and second-generation vaccine technologies been delayed for twenty years ... three million children would have died. Even for less life- and-death technologies, a twenty-year delay works an immense limitation on enjoyment of the right. For cultural works, the situation is even worse; protection lasts longer than a human lifetime.”[6]

Literature

The A2K term is also used in academic discourse and literature. Bloomsbury Academic have produced a series on issues in Brazil,[7] Egypt[8] and India;[9] while UCT Press have published an overview of the issues in Africa.[10]

An academic overview of the issues can be found in 'Access to Knowledge in the Age of Intellectual Property', published in 2010.[11]

See also

References

  1. ^ CI
  2. ^ http://www.cptech.org/a2k/
  3. ^ A2K Network
  4. ^ http://www.cptech.org/a2k/a2k_treaty_ may9.pdf
  5. ^ http://www.ip-watch.org/weblog/index. php?p=19&res=1280_ff&print=0
  6. ^ The Right to Science and Culture, Lea Shaver, p55
  7. ^ Ronaldo Lemos; Pedro Nicoletti Mizukami; Ronaldo Lemos; Bruno Magrani; Carlos Affonso Pereira de Souza (2010), Access to Knowledge in Brazil, Bloomsbury Academic 
  8. ^ Lea Shaver; Nagla Rizk (2010), Access to Knowledge in Egypt, Bloomsbury Academic, ISBN 978-1-84966-008-2, 1849660085 
  9. ^ Lea Shaver; Ramesh Subramanian (2011), Access to Knowledge in India, Bloomsbury Academic, ISBN 978-1849665261, 1849665265 
  10. ^ Armstrong, Chris Dr (2010), Access to Knowledge in Africa, UCT Press 
  11. ^ Gaelle Krikorian; Amy Kapczynski (2010), Access to Knowledge in the Age of Intellectual Property, MIT Press 

External links

Portals

Overviews

(Sebelumnya) Access Systems Americas, Inc.Accessible publishing (Berikutnya)