3rd Free Culture Research Conference

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Events

Conference in Berlin, Germany

2010/10/08

http://wikis.fu-berlin.de/display/fcrc/Home


The 3rd Free Culture Research Conference--Free Culture between Commons and Markets: Approaching the Hybrid Economy?

The Free Culture Research Conference presents a unique opportunity for scholars whose work contributes to the promotion, study or criticism of a Free Culture, to engage with a multidisciplinary group of academic peers and practitioners, identify the most important research opportunities and challenges, and attempt to chart the future of Free Culture. This event builds upon the successful workshop held in 2009 at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard University, organized and attended by renowned scholars and research institutions from the US, Europe and Asia. The first event was held in Sapporo, Japan, in 2008, in conjunction with the 4th iCommons Summit. This year's event is larger in ambition and scope, to provide more time for interaction in joint as well as break-out sessions. It is hosted jointly by the Free University of Berlin and the Max Planck Institute for the Study of Societies and will take place at October 8-9, 2010 at the Free University Campus in Berlin, in collaboration with COMMUNIA, the European Network on the digital public domain. Funding and support is also provided by the Heinrich Böll Foundation.

Given this year's theme and the generous support of the Free University's School of Business and Economics, we encourage submissions at the interface of Free Culture and business, although we welcome submissions from any relevant discipline, will be inclusive and will maintain the interdisciplinary nature of the event, as in previous years. Enabled by new Internet technologies and innovative legal solutions, Free Culture prospers in the form of new business models and via commons-based peer production, thereby both challenging and complementing classic market institutions. Alongside business perspectives, we expect that perspectives from law, IT, the social sciences and humanities will help us develop a better understanding of the challenges at hand, for individuals, business, law, the economy, and society at large. Topics of interest include:

  • Studies on the use and growth of open/free licensing models
  • Critical analyses of the role of Creative Commons or similar models
  • The role of Free Culture in markets, industry, government, or the non-profit sector
  • Technical, legal or business solutions towards a hybrid economy
  • Incentives, innovation and community dynamics in open collaborative peer production
  • Economic models for the sustainability of commons-based production
  • The economic value of the public domain
  • Business models and the public domain
  • Successes and failures of open licensing
  • Analyses of policies, court rulings or industry moves that influence the future of Free Culture
  • Regional studies of Free Culture with global lessons
  • Best practices from open/free licensing, and the application of different business and organizational models by specific communities or individuals
  • Definitions of openness and freedom for different media types, users and communities
  • Broader economic, sociopolitical, legal or cultural implications of Free Culture initiatives and peer production practices
  • Methodological concerns in the study of Free Culture