As most of you are well aware, the Recording Industry of America (RIAA) targets students who illegally download copyrighted content from peer-to-peer file-sharing networks. Over the last several years, KU copyright infringers have had to pay thousands of dollars for illegal downloads. The RIAA served a fresh batch of subpoenas to KU students during the Fall 2007 semester, leading to the creation of Student Senate task force to investigate and potentially change the way KU handles RIAA subpoenas.
When RIAA subpoenas landed at the
What does this have to do with sociology?
A lot, I think . . . Here’s one sociological observation:
I see faint signs that file-sharing litigation is moving from “repeat players” suing “one-shotters” to a more complicated situation where other “repeat-players” (colleges, universities, and attorneys general) defend the interests of students. Before the
Sociology of law superstar Marc Galanter published a 1974 article titled “Why the ‘Haves’ Come Out" which “has achieved uncontested canonical status within the broad range of college and university courses in law and social science. It has been cited more than any other piece of socio-legal research and is listed among the most well cited law review articles of all time.” (Kritzer & Silbey. 2003. In Litigation. pg. 4). He argues that the institutional position of people involved in lawsuits and legal conflicts directs participants’ legal strategies in ways that bolster the power and dominance of the “Haves” (the people who already have money and power, like the recording industry). By emphasizing institutional position and rational strategies that spring from that position, Galanter went against the then-prevailing Marxist and functionalist theories of how lawsuits affect society and reproduce inequality.
From page 14 of Galanter’s article (excerpted and edited):
FIGURE 1
A TAXONOMY OF LITIGATION BY STRATEGIC CONFIGURATION OF PARTIES
Initiator, Claimant
| One-Shotter | Repeat Player |
One-Shotter | Scenario I OS vs OS Parent v. Parent (Custody) Spouse v. Spouse (divorce) Family v. Family (inheritance) Neighbor v. Neighbor | Scenario II RP vs OS Prosecutor v. Accused Finance Company v. Debtor Landlord v. Tenant RIAA v. College Student |
Defendant | | |
Repeat Player | Scenario III RP vs RP Welfare Client v. Agency Auto Dealer v. Manufacturer Injured Victim v. Insurance Company Tenant v. Landlord Defamed v. Publisher | Scenario IV RP vs RP Developer v. Municipality Purchaser v. Supplier Regulatory Agency v. Multinational Company Oregon Attorney General v. RIAA |
Galanter’s model and argument helps us make sense of how things could change with the
Will the
For more on the RIAA’s legal offensive against colleges and universities, check out these two articles representing the RIAA’s position and an opposing point of view.
1 comment:
I think similar things happen with landlords in college towns. I know lots of people who have not had their deposits returned on apartments even though they were in good shape when they left. A friend of mine had all of his food go bad because the landlord didn't fix a broken refrigerator for two weeks. The average student doesn't have a lot of power to do anything about it, so some landlords can get away with taking advantage of students. If students and landlords were equals (in terms of money, experience, social standing, etc.), I think the situation would be very different. A landlord once tried to withhold my brother's deposit, but as soon as my dad got involved he backed down and returned it. When you have two people who are on an equal playing field, it is much harder to take advantage of people.
Post a Comment