1. | Attas, D. (2008). Lockean justifications of intellectual property. In A. Gosseries,A. Strowel, & A. Marciano (Eds.), Intellectual property and theories of justice (pp. 29–56). Palgrave-Macmillan. |
2. | Becker, L. C. (1993). Deserving to own intellectual property. Chicago-Kent Law Review, 68, 609–629. |
3. | Biron, L. (2010). Two challenges to the idea of intellectual property. The Monist, 93(3), 382–394. https://doi.org/10.5840/monist201093322. |
4. | Biron, L. (2016). The elusive ‘objects’ of intellectual property. In M. Goldhammer, M. Grünberger, & D. Klippel (Eds.), Geistiges Eigentum im Verfassungsstaat Geschichte und Theorie (pp. 127–141). Mohr Siebeck. |
5. | Błaszczyk, C. (2016). The critique of copyright in Hans Hermann Hoppe’s argumentation ethics. Studia Iuridica, 68, 33–54. |
6. | Błaszczyk, C. (2020). Lockean intellectual property refuted. Scientia Politica, 32, 161–186. |
7. | Boldrin, M., & Levine, D. K. (2008). Against intellectual monopoly. Cambridge University Press. |
8. | Bouckaert, B. (1990). What is property? Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, 13(3), 775–816. |
9. | Breakey, H. (2009). Liberalism and intellectual property rights. Politics, Philosophy and Economics, 3, 329–349. |
10. | Breakey, H. (2010). Natural intellectual property rights and the public domain. The Modern Law Review, 73, 208–239. |
11. | Cernea, M. V., & Uszkai, R. (2012). The clash between global justice and pharmaceutical patents: A critical analysis. Public Reason, 4(1–2), 210–221. |
12. | Chatterjee, M. (2022). Intellectual property, independent creation and the Lockean commons. UC Irvine Law Review, 12, 747–804. |
13. | Cohen, J. E. (2014). What kind of property is intellectual property? Houston Law Review, 52(2), 691–707. |
14. | Craig, C. J. (2002). Locke, labor and limiting the author’s right: A warning against a Lockean approach to copyright law. Queen’s Law Journal, 28(1), 1–60. |
15. | Cwik, B. (2014). Labor as the basis for intellectual property rights. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, 17, 681–695. |
16. | Cwik, B. (2016). Property rights in non-rival goods. Journal of Political Philosophy, 24(4), 470–486. https://doi.org/10.1111/jopp.12090. |
17. | Damstedt, B. G. (2003). Limiting Locke: A natural law justification for the fair use doctrine. The Yale Law Journal, 112, 1179–1221. |
18. | DeLong, J. V. (2002). Defending intellectual property. In A. Thierer, & C. W. Crews (Eds.), Copy fights: The future of intellectual property in the information age (pp. 17–36). Cato Institute. |
19. | Demsetz, H. (1967). Toward a theory of property rights. The American Economic Review, 57(2), 347–359. |
20. | Diamond, A. M. (2015). Seeking the patent truth: Patents can provide justice and funding for inventors. The Independent Review, 19(3), 325–355. |
21. | Drahos, P. (1996). A philosophy of intellectual property. Ashgate. |
22. | Dodd, J. (2000). Musical works as eternal types. British Journal of Aesthetics, 40, 424–440. https://doi.org/10.1093/bjaesthetics/40.4.424. |
23. | Dodd, J. (2008). Musical works: Ontology and meta-ontology. Philosophy Compass, 3, 1113–1134. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1747-9991.2008.00173.x. |
24. | Dominiak, Ł. (2014). Anarcho-capitalism, aggression and copyright. Political Dialogues, 16, 37–47. |
25. | Easterbrook, F. H. (1990). Intellectual property is still property. Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, 13, 108–118. |
26. | Epstein, R. A. (2009). The disintegration of intellectual property? A classical liberal response to a premature obituary. Stanford Law Review, 62, 455–522. http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.1236273. |
27. | Fallis, D. (2007). Toward an Epistemology of Intellectual Property. Journal of Information Ethics, 16(2), 34–51. |
28. | Faraci, D. (2014). Do property rights presuppose scarcity? Journal of Business Ethics, 125(3), 531–537. |
29. | Friedman, D. D. (2000). Law’s order. Princeton University Press. |
30. | Gamrot, W. (2021). On type creation and ownership. Political Dialogues, 30, 187–200. |
31. | Gamrot, W. (2022). The type-token distinction and four problems with propertarian IP justification. Axiomathes, 32, 1047–1059. |
32. | Gordon, W. J. (1989). An inquiry into the merits of copyright: the challenges of consistency, consent and encouragement theory. Stanford Law Review, 41, 1343–1469. |
33. | Gordon, W. J. (1993). A property right in self-expression: Equality and individualism in the natural law of intellectual property. The Yale Law Journal, 102, 1533–1609. |
34. | Hauser, J. (2017). Sharing is caring vs. stealing is wrong: a moral argument for limiting copyright protection. International Journal of Technology Policy and Law 3(1), 68–85. |
35. | Hettinger, E. C. (1989). Justifying intellectual property. Philosophy and Public Affairs, 18(1), 31–52. |
36. | Himma, K. E. (2005a). Abundance, rights, and interests: Thinking about the legitimacy of intellectual property. In P. Brey, F. Grodzinsky, & L. Introna (Eds.), Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference of Computer Ethics—Philosophical Enquiry (CEPE 2005). |
37. | Himma, K. E. (2005b). Information and intellectual property protection: Evaluating the claim that information should be free. APA Newsletter on Philosophy and Law, 4(2), 3–9. |
38. | Himma, K. E. (2007). Justifying intellectual property protection: Why the interests of content creators usually win over everyone else’s. In E. Rooksby, & J. Weckert (Eds.), Information Technology and Social Justice (pp. 47–68). IGI Global. |
39. | Himma, K. E. (2008). The justification for intellectual property: Contemporary philosophical disputes. Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology, 59, 1143–1161. https://doi.org/10.1002/asi.20853. |
40. | Himma, K.E. (2012). Toward a Lockean moral justification of legal protection of intellectual property. San Diego Law Review, 49, 1105–1182 |
41. | Hughes, J. (1988). The philosophy of intellectual property. Georgetown Law Journal, 77(287), 330–350. |
42. | Kinsella, N. S. (2003). A libertarian theory of contract: Title transfer, binding promises and inalienability. Journalof Libertarian Studies, 17(2), 11–37. https://doi.org/10.33392/diam.1800. |
43. | Kinsella, N. S. (2008). Against intellectual property. Ludwig von Mises Institute. |
44. | Kinsella, N. S. (2009). Intellectual property and libertarianism. Liberty, 23(11), 27–46. |
45. | Koepsell, D. R. (2015). Who owns you? Science, innovation and the gene patent wars. Wiley-Blackwell. |
46. | Koepsell, D., & Inglott, P. S. (2017). ICT’s architecture of freedom. In M. Hildebrandt, & B. van den Berg (Eds.), Information, Freedom and Property (pp. 109–130). Routledge. |
47. | Kraft, J. M., & Hovden, R. (2013). Natural rights, scarcity & intellectual property. New York University Journal of Law and Liberty, 7(2), 464–496. |
48. | Kuflik, A. (1989). The moral foundations of intellectual property rights. In V. Weil, & J. Snapper (Eds.), Owning scientific and technical information. Rutgers University Press. |
49. | Lambrecht, M. (2015). On water drinkers and magical springs: Challenging the Lockean proviso as a justification for copyright. Ratio Iuris, 28(4), 1–29. |
50. | LeFevre, R. (1971). The philosophy of ownership. Ludwig von Mises Institute. |
51. | Lemley, M. A. (2004). Ex ante versus ex post justifications for intellectual property. University of Chicago Law Review, 71, 129–150. |
52. | Lester, J. C. (2016). Against intellectual property: A short refutation of meme communism. In Arguments for liberty: A libertarian miscellany (pp. 148–154). The University of Buckingham Press. |
53. | Luper, S. (1999). Natural resources, gadgets and artificial life. Environmental Values, 8, 27–55. |
54. | Madison, M. (2012). The end of the work as we know it. Journal of Intellectual Property Law, 19, 325–355. |
55. | Massin, O. (2017). The metaphysics of ownership: A Reinachian account. Axiomathes, 27(5), 577–600. |
56. | Moglen, E. (1999). Anarchism triumphant: Free software and the death of copyright. First Monday, 4(8). https://doi.org/10.5210/fm.v4i8.684. |
57. | Moore, A. D. (1997). Lockean theoryof intellectual property. Hamline Law Review, 21, 65–108. |
58. | Moore, A. D. (1998). Intangible property: Privacy, power and information control. American Philosophical Quarterly, 35(4), 365–378. |
59. | Moore, A. D. (2003). Intellectual property: Theory, privilege, and pragmatism. Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence, 16(2), 191–216. |
60. | Moore, A. D. (2004). Intellectual property and information control: Philosophic foundations and contemporary issues. Routledge. |
61. | Moore, A. D. (2012). A Lockean theory of intellectual property revisited. San Diego Law Review, 49, 1069–1103. |
62. | Moore, A. D. (2015). Lockean foundations of intellectual property. The WIPO Journal, 7(1), 29–39. |
63. | Mossoff, A. (2005). Is copyright property? San Diego Law Review, 42, 29–44. |
64. | Murphy, D. J. (2012). Are intellectual property rights compatible with Rawlsian principles of justice? Ethics and Information Technology, 14, 109–121. |
65. | Narveson, J. (2010). Property and rights. Social Philosophy and Policy, 27(1), 101–134. |
66. | Nozick, R. (1974). Anarchy, state and utopia. Basic Books. |
67. | Palmer, T. G. (1990). Are patents and copyright morally justified? The philosophy of property rights and ideal objects. Harvard Journal of Law & Public Policy, 13(3), 817–865. |
68. | Penner, J. E. (1997). The idea of property in law. Oxford University Press. Peterson, J. (2008). Lockean property and literary works. Legal Theory, 14(4), 257–280. |
69. | Radder, H. (2013). Exploring philosophical issues in the patenting of scientific and technological inventions. Philosophy and Technology, 26, 283–300. |
70. | Ramello, G. B. (2005). Intellectual property and the markets of ideas. Review of Network Economics, 4(2), 161–180. |
71. | Rand, A. (1986). Capitalism: The unknown ideal. Signet. |
72. | Reisman, G. (1996). Capitalism: A treatise on economics. Jameson Books. |
73. | Resnik, D.B. (2003). A pluralistic account of intellectual property. Journal of Business Ethics, 46, 319–335. |
74. | Reinach, A. (1989). The apriori foundations of the civil law (J. F. Crosby, Trans.). Aletheia, 3, 1–142. |
75. | Sandefur, T. (2007). A critique of Ayn Rand’s theory of intellectual property rights. The Journal of Ayn Rand Studies, 9(1), 139–161. |
76. | Scanlan, M. (2005). Locke and intellectual property rights. In R. A. Spinello, & H. Tavani (Eds.), Intellectual property rights in a networked world: Theory and practice (pp. 83–98). Information Science Publishing. |
77. | Slutskiy, P. (2021). Communication and libertarianism. Springer. |
78. | Spinello, R. A. (2003). The future of intellectual property. Ethics and Information Technology, 5, 1–16. |
79. | Spinello, R. A., & Bottis. M. (2009). A defense of intellectual property rights. Edward Elgar. |
80. | Spitzlinger, R. (2011). On the idea of owning ideas: Applying Locke’s labor appropriation theory to intellectual goods. Masaryk University Journal of Law and Technology, 5(2), 273–287. |
81. | Spooner, L. (1855). The law of intellectual property; or an essay on the right of authors and inventors to a perpetual property in their ideas. Bela Marsh. |
82. | Timmermann, C. (2017). Harvesting the uncollected fruits of other people’s intellectual labor. Acta Bioethica, 23(2), 259–269. |
83. | Trerise, J. (2008). Liberty and the rejection of strong intellectual property rights. In A. Gosseries, A. Strowel, & A. Marciano (Eds.), Intellectual property and theories of justice (pp. 122–137). Palgrave-Macmillan. |
84. | Tucker, B. R. (1926). Individual liberty. Vanguard Press. |
85. | Uszkai, R. (2014). Are copyrights compatible with human rights? The Romanian Journal of Analytic Philosophy, 8(1), 5–20. |
86. | Uszkai, R. (2017). Intellectual property has no personality. Annals of the University of Bucharest Philosophy Series, 66(2), 181–205. |
87. | Varelius, J. (2015). Is the non-rivalrousness of intellectual objects a problem for the moral justification of economic rights to intellectual property? Science and Engineering Ethics, 21, 895-–906. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11948-014-9574-4. |
88. | Von Gunten, A. (2015). Intellectual property is common property: arguments for the abolition of private intellectual property rights. Buch & Netz. |
89. | Weckert, J. (1997). Intellectual property rights and computer software. Business Ethics, the Environment and Responsibility 6(2), 101–109. https://doi.org/10.1111/ |
90. | beer.1997.6.issue-2. |
91. | Wilson, J. (2009). Could there be a right to own intellectual property? Law and Philosophy, 28, 393–427. |
92. | Wilson, J. (2010). Ontology and the regulation of intellectual property. The Monist, 93(3), 450–463. https://doi.org/10.5840/monist201093326. |
93. | Wiśniewski, J. B. (2020). On the impossibility of intellectual property. Quarterly Journal of Austrian Economics, 23, 33–45. |
94. | Wreen, M. (2010). The ontologyof intellectual property. The Monist, 93(3), 433–449. https://doi.org/10.5840/monist201093325. |
95. | Wysocki, I. (2014). The rebuttalof pro-IP arguments. Political Dialogues, 17, 33–39. |
96. | Yen, A. C. (1990). Restoring the natural law: Copyright as labor and possession. Ohio State Law Journal, 51, 517–559. |
97. | Young, J. O. (2020). Radically rethinking copyright in the arts: A philosophical approach. Routledge. |
98. | Yung, B. (2009). Reflecting on the common discourse on piracy and intellectual property rights: A divergent perspective. Journal of Business Ethics, 87, 45–57. |