Back to Find Units Page

Unit of Study LAW72013 - Wisdom, Traditional Knowledge and Intellectual Property (2019)

Show me unit information for year

Unit Snapshot

  • Pre-requisites

    Any 8 Units (96 credit points) at tertiary level

  • Enrolment information

    This is an intensive unit taught over 4 days in the first week of session. Class times and room details will be provided on the School of Law and Justice website and posted to the learning site. Students must be able to commit to the delivery mode before enrolling in this unit.


Learning outcomes and graduate attributes

Unit Learning Outcomes express learning achievement in terms of what a student should know, understand and be able to do on completion of a unit. These outcomes are aligned with the graduate attributes. The unit learning outcomes and graduate attributes are also the basis of evaluating prior learning.

On completion of this unit, students should be able to:

GA1: Intellectual rigour, GA2: Creativity, GA3: Ethical practice, GA4: Knowledge of a discipline, GA5: Lifelong learning, GA6: Communication and social skills, GA7: Cultural competence
Learning outcome count Learning outcome description GA1 GA2 GA3 GA4 GA5 GA6 GA7
1 demonstrate and critically analyse how the concepts of law, culture and property relate to one another in legal and humanistic scholarship
2 demonstrate knowledge of the basic history, theory, and ethics that have underpinned the emergence of intellectual property, particularly as this domain of law relates to traditional knowledge and cultural heritage
3 analyse the significance of existing law on intellectual and cultural property, as well as how these laws function to protect or fail to protect traditional knowledge
4 explain how intellectual property mechanisms have been used both to exploit and protect cultural heritage and traditional knowledge in the past, as well as think about how such mechanisms might be used in the future
5 demonstrate basic knowledge of specific case studies where questions of intellectual property have figured prominently in the management of cultural heritage and traditional knowledge
6 demonstrate their skills in legal research, critical analysis and the written presentation of research and argument

On completion of this unit, students should be able to:

  1. demonstrate and critically analyse how the concepts of law, culture and property relate to one another in legal and humanistic scholarship
    • GA1:
  2. demonstrate knowledge of the basic history, theory, and ethics that have underpinned the emergence of intellectual property, particularly as this domain of law relates to traditional knowledge and cultural heritage
    • GA4:
    • GA7:
  3. analyse the significance of existing law on intellectual and cultural property, as well as how these laws function to protect or fail to protect traditional knowledge
    • GA1:
    • GA4:
    • GA7:
  4. explain how intellectual property mechanisms have been used both to exploit and protect cultural heritage and traditional knowledge in the past, as well as think about how such mechanisms might be used in the future
    • GA4:
    • GA7:
  5. demonstrate basic knowledge of specific case studies where questions of intellectual property have figured prominently in the management of cultural heritage and traditional knowledge
    • GA4:
    • GA7:
  6. demonstrate their skills in legal research, critical analysis and the written presentation of research and argument
    • GA1:

Prescribed learning resources

Prescribed Texts
  • No prescribed texts.

Prescribed Learning Resources may change in future Teaching Periods.