Alternatives to a corporate commons: biobanking, genetics and property in the body
Abstract
In this chapter I argue that the old common law concept of the commons can make a major contribution to how we regulate human tissue and genetic information in the twenty-first century. But if we want to use this concept, we will have to act fast, because private corporate interests have already realised the relevance of the commons for holdings in human tissue and genetic information. Instead of a commonly created and held resource, however, they have sought to create one derived from many persons' mutual labour but owned privately: what I call, with deliberate irony, a 'corporate commons'.