Αποτελέσματα Αναζήτησης
1 Ιουν 2014 · Organisms sometimes try to privatize resources to make them their property. • Property can solve the tragedy of the commons and allow for saving and investment. • Resources are privatized by force, hiding, incorporation and ownership convention. • Property is particularly important in social organisms. •
- Privatization and Property in Biology
Property is a neglected topic in biology, although examples...
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Tree cover in savanna ecosystems is usually regarded as...
- Bacteriocin Diversity
The bacteriocin family is the most abundant and diverse...
- Privatization and Property in Biology
22 Φεβ 2023 · What is ownership interest in a property? Owning real estate grants you the right to possess, use, improve or sell your property as you see fit. But those rights may change depending on...
1 Ιουν 2020 · The behavioristic trait manifested by a display of property ownership—a defense of certain positions or things—reaches its highest development in the human species. Man considers it his inherent right to own property either as an individual or as a member of society or both.
30 Απρ 2018 · What is the property status of information derived from human genetic samples? 1 Most importantly, does the originator of the information—the donor—have some form of private property right (morally and/or legally, wholly or partially), to that information?
15 Μαΐ 2021 · Résumé. This article explores the relation between ownership and sustainability on a conceptual level. It specifically examines different imaginaries of sustainable property by asking how private property rights and their restrictions are conceptualized as instruments for sustainability.
6 Σεπ 2004 · Strictly speaking, ‘property’ is a general term for the rules that govern people’s access to and control of things like land, natural resources, the means of production, manufactured goods, and also (on some accounts) texts, ideas, inventions, and other intellectual products.
It discusses the creation of property rights to intellectual resources. Then it takes the reverse perspective examined previously and focuses on the role of capitalism for the creation and continued evolution of property rights.