Document Type
Article
Publication Date
January 1997
Abstract
What can the Navajos do to prevent non-Navajos from using Navajo rug patterns to produce rugs overseas using cheap material and labor, thereby undercutting the Navajos themselves in a market for their famous rugs? What can the Australian Aboriginal peoples do when their sacred and secret imagery is reporduced on carpets they did not make, and sold to non-Aboriginals, who will inevitably walk on them? Do these communities have any legal rights to these pieces of their culture? Does the law provide any means for them to take back their culture or to prevent further poaching?https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=923410
Recommended Citation
Christine Farley,
Protecting Folklore of Indigenous Peoples: Is Intellectual Property the Answer?,
Connecticut Law Review
(1997).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.wcl.american.edu/facsch_lawrev/725
Included in
Cultural Heritage Law Commons, Indigenous, Indian, and Aboriginal Law Commons, Intellectual Property Law Commons
Comments
Farley, Christine Haight, Protecting Folklore of Indigenous Peoples: Is Intellectual Property the Answer? (1997). 30 Connecticut Law Review 1 (1997).