Decolonising Intellectual Property Law: An Afrocentric Approach
This book advocates for an Afrocentric approach to intellectual property (IP) law, using lessons from Nigeria’s past to encourage reform for the future of Africa’s legal IP landscape.

 

Highlighting the Eurocentric influence on the history of intellectual property law in Africa, the book demonstrates how this contradicts traditional African community culture. This book makes the case for legitimising cultural expressions of traditional communities despite the western legal framework within which they exist, reimagining a decolonised IP framework whereby African histories are centred. Questioning the fundamentals of the current IP landscape, such as the concept of eligibility in copyright which developed alongside European technological advances, the book also details the role of the courts in resolving IP disputes. It highlights Africa as a powerhouse of original, autonomous innovation, values and traditions which predate the West’s concept of intellectual property. It illustrates the African experience of intellectual property from a pro-African perspective as shared by African authors.

 

This book will be of interest to researchers in the field of Intellectual Property, copyright and patent law, as well as African law.

1147419694
Decolonising Intellectual Property Law: An Afrocentric Approach
This book advocates for an Afrocentric approach to intellectual property (IP) law, using lessons from Nigeria’s past to encourage reform for the future of Africa’s legal IP landscape.

 

Highlighting the Eurocentric influence on the history of intellectual property law in Africa, the book demonstrates how this contradicts traditional African community culture. This book makes the case for legitimising cultural expressions of traditional communities despite the western legal framework within which they exist, reimagining a decolonised IP framework whereby African histories are centred. Questioning the fundamentals of the current IP landscape, such as the concept of eligibility in copyright which developed alongside European technological advances, the book also details the role of the courts in resolving IP disputes. It highlights Africa as a powerhouse of original, autonomous innovation, values and traditions which predate the West’s concept of intellectual property. It illustrates the African experience of intellectual property from a pro-African perspective as shared by African authors.

 

This book will be of interest to researchers in the field of Intellectual Property, copyright and patent law, as well as African law.

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Decolonising Intellectual Property Law: An Afrocentric Approach

Decolonising Intellectual Property Law: An Afrocentric Approach

Decolonising Intellectual Property Law: An Afrocentric Approach

Decolonising Intellectual Property Law: An Afrocentric Approach

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Overview

This book advocates for an Afrocentric approach to intellectual property (IP) law, using lessons from Nigeria’s past to encourage reform for the future of Africa’s legal IP landscape.

 

Highlighting the Eurocentric influence on the history of intellectual property law in Africa, the book demonstrates how this contradicts traditional African community culture. This book makes the case for legitimising cultural expressions of traditional communities despite the western legal framework within which they exist, reimagining a decolonised IP framework whereby African histories are centred. Questioning the fundamentals of the current IP landscape, such as the concept of eligibility in copyright which developed alongside European technological advances, the book also details the role of the courts in resolving IP disputes. It highlights Africa as a powerhouse of original, autonomous innovation, values and traditions which predate the West’s concept of intellectual property. It illustrates the African experience of intellectual property from a pro-African perspective as shared by African authors.

 

This book will be of interest to researchers in the field of Intellectual Property, copyright and patent law, as well as African law.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781032985718
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 09/29/2025
Series: Routledge Research in Intellectual Property
Pages: 224
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.19(h) x (d)

About the Author

Dr Jade Kouletakis is an award-winning academic with experience teaching IP Law in multiple higher education institutions across two continents since 2014. She has been an invited keynote speaker at the University of Cambridge; University of St Andrews; and the Scottish Law and Innovation Network. She has published one of the ‘most read’ articles and the second ‘most read’ article on the websites of the Journal of World Intellectual Property (for whom she peer-reviews) and GRUR International: Journal of European and International IP Law. For REF 2021, she produced a maximum number of REF-qualifying outputs and submitted an Impact Case Study.

 

Nkem Itanyi is a law lecturer and academic researcher specialising in Intellectual Property Law. She has over two decades of experience in research and teaching across two continents. With an impressive record of academic scholarship, she holds a PhD in Intellectual Property Law from Queen’s University Belfast, an LLM in Corporate and Commercial Law from University College London, and an LLB (Hons) from Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria. Nkem’s research is active; she is well published in law and has been cited in leading peer-reviewed academic journals indexed in Clarivate Web of Science, Scopus, and other databases. Her expertise extends to Media Law and the intersection of IP and AI.

Table of Contents

List of Contributors

Foreword by Professor Graham Dutfield

 

Introduction: Rewriting the History of Intellectual Property Law in Africa - A Decolonisation Perspectice

Nkem Itanyi

 

Chapter 1 - Decolonising Copyright Theory: Justifying Copyright Ownership Through the Prism of the United Nations Developmental Agenda

Jade Kouletakis

 

Chapter 2 - From Moonlight Tales to Town Halls to Cinemas: Customary Copyright Practices and Performances that Led to Nollywood in Nigeria

Nkem Itanyi

 

Chapter 3 - Traditional Peoples in Africa and Intellectual Property Rights: Losing The Status of Their Jurisprudence and Knowledge Systems

Ayoyemi Lawal-Arowolo

 

Chapter 4 - Technology, Intellectual Property Rights Protection and Nigerian Development by

Ike Chime

 

Chapter 5 - Apprenticeship System (Igba Boyi) of Preserving Indigenous Knowledge in Igbo Land, Southast Nigeria and Technology Transfer in Patent Law: A Necessary Linkage

Nneka Chioma Ezedum

 

Chapter 6 - An overview of the Patenting Scheme: The Nigerian Story

Regina Obiechine

 

Chapter 7 - Decolonisation of Methods of Medicine Production and Patents in Nigeria: The Dilemma of Colonial Mentality on Traditional Medicine

Ayoyemi Lawal-Arowolo and Adesoji Adebayo

 

Chapter 8 - A Comparative Study of African and Western Mediation Cultures with a Focus on the Music Industry

Seun Lari-Williams

 

Conclusion: From Passive to Active Voice, or The Start of a Conversation with Africa

Jade Kouletakis

 

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