This is a 
cross-post of my response to Madhavi Sunder's book 
From Goods to a Good Life in a blogging symposium over at Concurring Opinions.
Like the other commenters on 
From Goods to a Good Life, I 
also enjoyed the book and applaud Professor Sunder's initiative in 
engaging more explicitly in the values conversation than has been 
conventionally done in IP scholarship. I also agree with most of what 
the other commenters have said.  I want to offer plaudits, a few 
challenges, and some suggestions about future directions for this 
conversation.
 Plaudits.
Plaudits. 
 In the spirit of showing-not-telling, Professor Sunder's concrete 
examples of borrowing practices across the world and in different 
creative and innovative sectors give force to the argument that all 
culture is participatory and that the real question is who is allowed to
 participate and under what terms. I particularly enjoyed the fan 
fiction chapter (and the article upon which it is based), the 
Hollywood/Bollywood chapter, and the engagement with the thorny topic of
 "traditional knowledge".  On this last, like others, I'm less sanguine 
about the prospects for greater propertization than is Professor Sunder,
 but certainly there are ways in which the poor might more effectively 
use the existing legal structure to exercise greater control.
I 
also think that building out the case for cultural participation as 
self-actualization (at both the individual and community levels) is 
nicely done.  To the extent that this book is a response to selected 
scholarship and the work of certain public intellectuals, Professor 
Sunder rightly critiques unstated assumptions upon which traditional 
law-and-economics work is built, while also critiquing the romance of 
the public domain.
I did not read Professor Sunder to be making an
 argument for specific law reform - although some options are mentioned -
 rather than to advocate for a vision of the good.  I took this to be a 
political argument about why and how the cultures, contributions, and 
productive capacity of marginalized populations deserve greater 
recognition in society, first, and in law to the extent that this is not
 already done.
Challenges. On this last point, I 
would like to understand better the relation between Professor Sunder's 
cultural critique and her legal critique. Somewhat like a cultural 
fitness instructor, Professor Sunder urges us to get off the couch, flex
 our creative muscles and ensure that everyone in society is equipped 
with a cultural gym pass and the time and support to put it to use.  
But, time and attention are limited resources.  When living the good 
life, what is the right mix of "writing" and "reading" culture?  Can we 
have both a participatory and a popular culture?  Writing in a moment 
when 
so much time and attention around the world is devoted to 
corporate-produced mass culture, I understand why Professor Sunder 
focuses her energy on the case for participation. "[T]he end is 
participation in meaning-making and in having the capacity to earn a 
livelihood to achieve the life one scripts for herself." [100] But, 
there are trade-offs.  A shared experience as audience plays an 
important role in promoting cultural cohesion.  I would like to know 
whether there could be a point of too much participation within 
Professor Sunder's conception of the good life.
This book is 
directed at the law-in-selected-scholarship, and, very generally, at the
 law on the books, rather than at the law in action.  Fair enough.  But,
 the version of efficiency from the scholarship that Professor Sunder 
targets is assuredly an artificial one that emerged when Professor 
Landes and Judge Posner made their move from welfare to wealth as the 
unit of measure.  They, and their followers, made this move without 
taking any meaningful account of the gap between the willingness-to-pay 
and ability-to-pay, the distortions caused by money's declining marginal
 value, the incommensurability problem, and the gap between partial and 
general equilibria, among other shortcomings.
Moreover, as I and others have 
written at greater length 
elsewhere,
 even when one accepts this version of efficiency, its internal logic, 
if fully explicated, would likely lead the law on the books to align 
more closely with that suggested by Professor Sunder's approach than is 
readily appreciated.  The first order question is why promote progress, 
and how does one define it?  Second is whether intellectual property law
 or a direct investment policy would better achieve efficiency, however 
measured. The law and economics literature lacks a general framework for
 arriving at the most efficient choices among these approaches.  This 
point gets a brief mention in the discussion of prizes in the last 
chapter, but I would have thought it to be more central to Professor 
Sunder's thesis. Third, even to the extent that creating and enforcing 
intellectual property rights is justified on efficiency grounds, the 
subject matter, scope, and duration of these should vary sufficiently to
 leave more room than existing law does for participatory culture.
Finally,
 I was expecting a more explicit human rights turn or at least more 
thoroughgoing engagement with the body of international human rights law
 in which Professor Sunder's thesis sounds.  She does acknowledge the 
link at pp. 90, 92-93, and 101, but I would have been particularly 
interested to understand how Professor Sunder would resolve the conflict
 between the moral rights justification for authors' rights and her 
argument for a fair and participatory culture.  Human flourishing cuts 
both ways.  Your right to preserve the integrity of your work on 
personhood grounds limits my ability to participate in culture by 
mashing it up.
Future Directions. My sense is 
that those interested in efficiency as measured by welfare and those 
approaching intellectual property from Professor Sunder's approach might
 well come to 
incompletely theorized agreement
 about the proper delineation of most rights.  The values conversation 
may provoke greater disagreement about what other policies might be 
desirable to support broader cultural participation.  Moreover, the 
values conversation is directly relevant to how one conceives of, and 
chooses to pursue, the good life within the legal framework.  I would 
submit that this conversation should lead toward a working theory of 
information justice, which would certainly draw from more general 
theories of justice, including those upon which Professor Sunder 
relies.  On this point, I would put in a plug for Peter Drahos' elegant 
and, at the moment, ridiculously scarce 
A Philosophy of Intellectual Property,
 which lays a rich intellectual foundation upon which this conversation 
could fruitfully build.  That said, thank you, Professor Sunder, for a 
good read and much food for thought.