Global Political Economy of Intellectual Property Rights, 2nd ed: The New Enclosures vs Private Power, Public Law: The Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights
Overall winner: Private Power, Public Law: The Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights
Key Differences
Susan K. Sell's Private Power, Public Law (A) is positioned as a more affordable, scholarly analysis focused on globalization of IP with relevance to franchising law and has more user ratings. Christopher May's The Global Political Economy of Intellectual Property Rights, 2nd ed (B) carries an authoritative academic perspective aimed at policy and law studies but targets a narrower audience and has a single review
Global Political Economy of Intellectual Property Rights, 2nd ed: The New Enclosures
A scholarly examination of how intellectual property rights shape global politics and markets. Explores enclosure of knowledge and policy implications for global governance. Customer insight: mixed sentiment on accessibility
Pros
- scholarly depth on IP and global economy
- clear focus on policy implications
- updates 2nd edition
- relevant for graduate studies
Cons
- price may be high
- niche audience
- limited customer feedback in data
Private Power, Public Law: The Globalization of Intellectual Property Rights
Analysis of how globalization shapes intellectual property rights in international relations. Explains policy implications and scholarly perspectives. customer insight: mixed data; no explicit sentiment stated
Pros
- conceptual exploration of IP globalization
- academic depth in international relations
- structured within Cambridge Studies series
- clear bibliographic reference for researchers
Cons
- limited customer insight data available
- no practical implementation guidance
- may be dense for general readers
Head-to-Head
| Criteria | Winner |
|---|---|
| Price | Susan K. Sell |
| Durability | Tie |
| Versatility | Tie |
| User Reviews | Susan K. Sell |