Abstract
Although analysis in IR and IPE has increasingly started to focus on non-state actors and the information society, the role of the legal architecture of the Internet has been relatively under-analysed in terms of the structural power around communication interfaces. In this article I suggest the work of Lewis Mumford offers a useful lens for thinking about the political economy of technological change in an information society. I set out the role of intellectual property rights as the legal form of the global information society, and suggest a major challenge to this legal form is the idea of openness, specifically in the realm of open-source and/or free software. I examine this issue in the realm of (so-called) informational development, where major proprietary players (predominantly Microsoft) have been confronted by an increasingly vibrant open-source alternative. The open-source and free-software movements can be analysed as an emerging example of a globalised double movement, seeking to re-embed the tools of informational development in a societal realm of information, establishing in Mumfords terms a democratic technics as a reaction to the programme of information and knowledge commodification spurred by the TRIPs agreement. Copyright © British International Studies Association.
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CITATION STYLE
May, C. (2008). Opening other windows: A political economy of openness in a global information society. Review of International Studies, 34(SUPPL. 1), 69–92. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0260210508007808
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