Academic literature on the topic 'Bootlegging'

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Journal articles on the topic "Bootlegging"

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Lyu, Ledi, Haomin Zhang, and Kai Gao. "Why Does Distributed Leadership Foster or Hamper Bootlegging Behavior of Employees: The Role of Exploratory-Exploitative Learning Tension and Paradox Mindset." Mathematical Problems in Engineering 2022 (September 22, 2022): 1–13. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2022/3093641.

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Bootlegging innovation, the act of developing an idea by an employee even when it was banned by the leader, is a novel and interesting construct that can bring both positive and negative outcomes to organizations. It is of interest to the organizations, leaders within those organizations, and the employers. Drawing upon paradox theory and organizational learning perspectives, we theorize and test a moderated mediation model to explore the relationship between distributed leadership and bootlegging behavior. We use a three-stage questionnaire method to collect data from 517 employees of information technology enterprises in China. Our results corroborate the following: (a) distributed leadership is positively related to the bootlegging behavior of employees; (b) exploratory-exploitative learning tension mediates the linkage between the distributed leadership and the bootlegging behavior of employees; (c) employee’s paradox mindset moderates the positive relationship between exploratory-exploitative learning tensions and the bootlegging behavior and also moderates the positive direct relationship between the distributed leadership and employee’s bootlegging behavior, so that the relationship is amplified when paradox mindset is strong. We discuss the implications for theory development and practice concerning how distributed leadership can influence personal bootlegging behavior.
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Jia, Jianfeng, Zhi Liu, and Yuyan Zheng. "How does paradoxical leadership promote bootlegging: a TPB-based multiple mediation model." Chinese Management Studies 15, no. 4 (June 19, 2021): 919–39. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/cms-09-2020-0418.

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Purpose This study aims to explore the antecedents of bootlegging from the perspective of paradoxical leadership. Based on the theory of planned behavior (TPB), it examines a multiple mediation model with harmonious innovation passion, role breadth self-efficacy and perceived error management culture as mediators, to interpret why paradoxical leadership influences employee bootlegging. Design/methodology/approach To test the theoretical model, data were collected from 218 full-time employees from enterprises in Chinese cities using a three-wave time-lagged design. Path-analysis and a bootstrapping approach in Mplus7 were used to examine the hypotheses of the theoretical model. Findings The results show that paradoxical leadership has a positive influence on bootlegging. In the multiple mediation model, the effect paths of harmonious innovation passion and role breadth self-efficacy are significant but there is an insignificant difference in their power, while the effect path of perceived error management culture is insignificant, although it has a significant simple mediating effect and sequential mediating effect. Originality/value This study is among the first to show the influence of paradoxical leadership on bootlegging, responding to the research call to use the paradoxical factors to capture the antecedents of innovative behaviors. Second, this study enriches the outcomes of paradoxical leadership, that of bootlegging. Third, this study provides a TPB-based mechanism of how paradoxical leadership promotes bootlegging by increasing employees’ harmonious innovation passion, role breadth self-efficacy and perceived error management culture. This provides a new theoretical perspective to explain the relationship between paradoxical leadership and employee bootlegging. It also responds to the call for exploration of the multiple pathways of leadership.
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Li, Shuwen, Ruiqian Jia, Juergen H. Seufert, Huijie Tang, and Jinlian Luo. "As the tree is, so is the fruit? Examining the effects of ethical leadership on bootlegging from the perspective of leader–follower gender similarity." Gender in Management: An International Journal 36, no. 7 (June 30, 2021): 785–800. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/gm-06-2020-0180.

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Purpose The purpose of this study is to explore how and when ethical leadership enhances bootlegging. To achieve this purpose, the authors proposed a moderated dual-path model in this study. Design/methodology/approach The model was tested on two related studies. Study 1 was based on three-wave, collected data from a sample of 511 employees of Chinese companies. Data used in Study 2 was collected by survey from employees and their direct leaders of multiple departments of companies in China. Findings In Study 1, the authors found that moral efficacy and moral identity mediate between ethical leadership and bootlegging. Findings from Study 2 provide convergent support of moral efficacy’s and moral identity’s impact on the mediation relationship between ethical leadership and bootlegging. Moreover, the results of Study 2 further reveal that the relationship between ethical leadership and moral efficacy (or moral identity) was more significant among leader–follower with different genders. Originality/value This study not only enriches the literature on ethical leadership and gender (dis)similarity, but also helps managers to better understand the function of bootlegging.
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Augsdorfer, Peter. "Bootlegging and path dependency." Research Policy 34, no. 1 (February 2005): 1–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.respol.2004.09.010.

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GLOBOCNIK, DIETFRIED. "TAKING OR AVOIDING RISK THROUGH SECRET INNOVATION ACTIVITIES — THE RELATIONSHIPS AMONG EMPLOYEES’ RISK PROPENSITY, BOOTLEGGING, AND MANAGEMENT SUPPORT." International Journal of Innovation Management 23, no. 03 (April 2019): 1950022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1363919619500221.

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This study aims to contribute to the research on bootlegging by investigating (i) whether employees’ risk propensity explains why some secretly organise innovation, whereas others do not, and (ii) how direct management support for compliant innovative behaviour affects this relationship. Answers to these questions are relevant because managers experience bootlegging in their organisations but do neither know from which employees they can expect creative deviance nor how to regulate it. Drawing on risk behaviour theory, risk propensity is supposed to foster bootlegging behaviour, and different forms of management support moderate this relationship by changing the salience of opportunities and the threats inherent in “going underground”. The empirical results provide ample support for the direct impact of risk propensity. This effect becomes weaker when managers provide more support in the form of resources and feedback, whereas encouragement to innovate strengthens the relationship.
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Davis, Robert S., and Gary W. Potter. "BOOTLEGGING AND RURAL CRIMINAL ENTREPRENEURSHIP." Journal of Crime and Justice 14, no. 1 (January 1991): 145–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0735648x.1991.9721430.

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Pearson, Alan. "Innovation Management — Is There Still a Role for "Bootlegging"?" International Journal of Innovation Management 01, no. 02 (June 1997): 191–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s1363919697000115.

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It has been suggested that "bootlegging" can lead to a special type of bottom-up innovation. Some recent research indicates that bootlegging is being carried out in over 75 per cent of laboratories in technology-based firms. It should therefore have a significant impact on innovation. However, it might be assumed that, by its very nature, it cannot be managed and hence the potential more effectively realised. By definition, it is an activity which does not fit within the normal programmed activity and, in some cases, is actually undertaken against the expressed wishes of the organisation. Using a simple framework which was developed to consider aspects of R&D project management and innovation strategy, it is argued that bootlegging can arise for many different reasons, such as "curiosity", to attack technical problems which have resulted in the disbandment of a project, or to assess markets which the organisation does not believe are viable or is not prepared to consider. If this is the case, one can conclude that the innovative performance of many organisations could be improved if more attention was paid to managing the process.
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Li, Fuda, Bangzhe Tan, Caifeng Qin, and Yanfei Ke. "When Does Overqualification Affect Bootlegging Positively?" Psychology Research and Behavior Management Volume 15 (December 2022): 3845–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/prbm.s393835.

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Criscuolo, Paola, Ammon Salter, and Anne L. J. Ter Wal. "Going Underground: Bootlegging and Individual Innovative Performance." Organization Science 25, no. 5 (October 2014): 1287–305. http://dx.doi.org/10.1287/orsc.2013.0856.

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Criscuolo, Paola, Ammon Salter, and Anne L. J. ter Wal. "Going Underground: Bootlegging and Individual Innovation Performance." Academy of Management Proceedings 2012, no. 1 (July 2012): 12234. http://dx.doi.org/10.5465/ambpp.2012.12234abstract.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Bootlegging"

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Marshall, Lee. "Losing one's mind : bootlegging and the sociology of copyright." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2001. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/3068/.

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This thesis offers a sociological analysis of authorship and copyright. It analyses how a specific model of authorship (characterised as 'Romantic') has come to form the foundation for understanding copyright even though such an understanding does not have any basis in the original purposes of copyright. This argument is then illustrated with a case study of an area of popular music known as 'bootlegging'. The thesis begins with a discussion of the early history of copyright law. It is argued that, rather than being for the benefit of authors, copyright was initially intended as a means of securing public education. On the basis of this discussion it is argued that copyright is a relationship between three interests - authors, public and publisher - but that the rhetorical uses of authorship prove especially critical for understanding copyright as a social phenomenon. The thesis goes on to investigate why Romanticism and copyright should be so intimately linked, relating copyright to notions of individually and immortality, and what problems this understanding of authorship causes. In particular, it is argued that the public interest, the intended beneficiary of copyright law, has been diminished because of the dominance of Romantic authorship. The thesis then offers some alternative conceptualisations of both creativity and copyright. This argument is then illustrated by a case study of the popular music industry. This section of the thesis begins by examining the dominance of Romantic ideals within rock music ideology and discusses the 'functions' of Romanticism for both the music industry and copyright industries more generally. The case study looks at the phenomenon of bootlegging (the commercial release of live performances and outtakes by individuals other than the rights holders) as an exemplar of the trends under discussion. The case study is structured around the question of why bootlegging is viewed as a problem by the legitimate record industry when it is of minimal economic impact. It is suggested that the answer to this puzzle is that bootlegging poses an explicit challenge to Romantic authorship. However, the thesis concludes that bootlegging not only contests but in its own way also reproduces the Romantic idea of authorship.
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Moore, Stephen T. "Bootlegging and the borderlands: Canadians, Americans, and the Prohibition -era Northwest." W&M ScholarWorks, 2000. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539623992.

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Between 1920 and 1933, no issue in Canadian-American relations proved more contentious or more intractable than prohibition. While American enforcement authorities and diplomats repeatedly sought the assistance of the Dominion government to stop the flow of liquor across the border, not until 1933 did Canada acquiesce to American requests. In the meantime, Canadian brewers, distillers, rumrunners, and bootleggers were more than happy to assuage the parched throats of their American neighbors.;By examining the geographic, historical, political, economic, social, and cultural fabric of the bilateral relationship in the Pacific Northwest borderlands, this study takes a regional approach to explain the intractability of the prohibition problem. It seeks to explore the complex interaction and relationship between common Canadian and American citizens, such as the bootleggers, tourists and temperance workers, as well as local government officials who contribute to the more common, day-to-day Canadian-American relationship. It also seeks to explain why British Columbians generally advocated cooperation with the United States in advance of more eastern Canadians.;The answer is found in the unique relationship shared by Canadians and Americans in this region who, by geographic necessity, often had more in common with their counterparts north or south of the border than they did with their respective sovereignties to the east. Indeed, the central paradox of prohibition in the Pacific Northwest is that the very heritage that had enabled a smuggling economy prior to prohibition also advocated Canadian and American cooperation in the later enforcement against the illicit liquor traffic. After a particularly sensational hijacking and slaying of a Canadian rumrunning crew in 1924, and then again after royal commission investigating the Canadian Department of Customs and Excise discovered evidence of widespread corruption at the highest levels of the Dominion government, British Columbians began to recognize that, whatever the profits, enabling rumrunning no longer served Canada's best interests.
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Masoudnia, Yaser. "Bootlegging in high technology R&D departments : from initiation to disclosure." Thesis, Cranfield University, 2012. http://dspace.lib.cranfield.ac.uk/handle/1826/7919.

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Bootlegging -the unauthorised projects initiated by an employee and directed toward innovation for the benefit of their organization -is an important aspect of innovation, because it is considered to be a great source of bottom-up innovation within organisations. Since it is clandestine and hidden from management and researchers, it has remained one of the least researched aspects of the innovation process. There are a handful of studies on the topic of bootlegging in the management literature – mainly based on one or a small number of case studies. The research suggests that bootlegging activity can lead to innovative new products and is seen in a positive light by a large majority of authors. However, the existing literature lacks empirical evidence and consensus among different authors on the various aspects of bootlegging such as reasons for bootlegging, underground operation, disclosure stage of bootlegging and its outcomes. Since bootlegging is a clandestine process, after careful consideration of a variety options, it was concluded that in-depth interviews with bootleggers is the most appropriate approach for studying the topic. Network sampling was applied to identify bootleggers and gain their trust. The researcher has utilised his network and attended several professional and engineering conferences to identify and approach bootleggers rather than contacting them through their managers and organisations. Subsequently, 55 in-depth semi-structured interviews were undertaken. The appropriate research methodology helped to shed light on these under-researched aspects of innovation. Cont/d.
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Augsdorfer, Peter. "Forbidden fruit : an analysis of bootlegging, uncertainty and learning in corporate R&D." Thesis, University of Sussex, 1994. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.259459.

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Þorgrímsdóttir, Erla Silfá. "Can't hear my eyes : Bootleg." Thesis, Konstfack, Institutionen för Konst (K), 2012. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:konstfack:diva-3717.

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In this essay I will describe my working method as an artist with a political perspective, talking about what political art can be and how it can have an effect. I also write about the development of my work, from the interest in the independent nature person to the contrasting role as a citizen. I contextualize my artistic method by raising some questions that I find interesting when dealing with the public in relation to my method; I am recording sound in the city.
Erla Silfá Þorgrímsdóttir
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Braun, Stefan K. "Aspekte des „Samplings“." Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2014. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-147027.

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Mash-Ups (auch Bootlegging, Bastard Pop oder Collage genannt) erfreuen sich seit Jahren steigender Beliebtheit. Waren es zu Beginn der 1990er Jahre meist nur 2 unterschiedliche Popsongs, deren Gesangs- und Instrumentenspuren in Remixform ineinander gemischt wurden, existieren heute Multi-Mash-Ups mit mehreren Dutzend gemixten und gesampelten Songs, Interpreten, Videosequenzen und Effekten. Eine Herausforderung stellt die Kombination unterschiedlichster Stile dar, diese zu neuen tanzbaren Titeln aus den Charts zu mischen. Das Mash-Up Projekt Pop Danthology z.B. enthält in einem knapp 6 minütigen aktuellen Musikclip 68 verschiedene Interpreten, u. a. Bruno Mars, Britney Spears, Rhianna und Lady Gaga. Die Verwendung und das Sampeln fremder Musik- und Videotitel kann eine Urheberrechtsverletzung darstellen. Die Komponisten des Titels „Nur mir“ mit Sängerin Sabrina Setlur unterlagen in einem Rechtsstreit, der bis zum BGH führte. Sie haben im Zuge eines Tonträger-Samplings, so der BGH , in das Tonträgerherstellerrecht der Kläger (Musikgruppe Kraftwerk) eingegriffen, in dem sie im Wege des „Sampling“ zwei Takte einer Rhythmussequenz des Titels „Metall auf Metall“ entnommen und diese im eigenen Stück unterlegt haben. Der rasante technische Fortschritt macht es mittlerweile möglich, immer einfacher, schneller und besser Musik-, Film- und Bildaufnahmen zu bearbeiten und zu verändern. Computer mit Bearbeitungssoftware haben Keyboards, Synthesizer und analoge Mehrspurtechnik abgelöst. Die Methoden des Samplings unterscheiden sich von der klassischen Raubkopie dahingehend, dass mit der Sampleübernahme eine weitreichende Umgestaltung und Bearbeitung erfolgt. Die Raubkopie zeichnet sich durch eine unveränderte Übernahme des Originals aus. Betroffen von den Auswirkungen eines nicht rechtmäßig durchgeführten Sampling sind Urheber- und Leistungsschutzrechte ausübender Künstler sowie Leistungsschutzrechte von Tonträgerherstellern. U. U. sind auch Verstöße gegen das allgemeine Persönlichkeits- und Wettbewerbsrecht Gegenstand von streitigen Auseinandersetzungen.
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MING, YU-CHUN, and 閔郁純. "The Bootlegging Trade on the East Coast during the Prohibition Era, 1920-1933." Thesis, 2018. http://ndltd.ncl.edu.tw/handle/58e9b4.

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碩士
東吳大學
歷史學系
106
Bootlegging trade was the most unstoppable criminal activity which the authority intended to restrain during Prohibition Era in the United States from 1920 to 1933. Since the Eighteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution be enabled on January 17, 1920. The production, importation, transportation, and sale of intoxicating liquors had been ban and regarded as illegal in nationwide. However, the legislation did not prevented the amounts of alcohol consuming activities raised up. Due to the high profit, there are incalculable the number of people who involved with bootlegging and smuggling alcohol consequently. The following article aims to investigate the ways, measures and the influence of bootlegging trade activities during prohibition era under the Eighteenth Amendment and the Volstead Act.
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Books on the topic "Bootlegging"

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Wilson, Gary A. Honky-tonk town: Havre's bootlegging days. Helena, Mont: Montana Magazine, 1985.

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Grace, Mary Elizabeth. Bootlegging apples on the road to redemption. Toronto: Insomniac Press, 1995.

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Walker, Clifford. One eye closed, the other red: The California bootlegging years. Barstow, CA: Back Door Pub., 1999.

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Thursby, Jerry G. Interstate cigarette bootlegging: Extent, revenue losses, and effects of federal intervention. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, 1994.

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Forbidden fruit: An analysis of bootlegging, uncertainty, and learning in corporate R&D. Aldershot, Hants, England: Avebury, 1996.

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Rappa, Michael A. Bandwagons, bootlegging and grapevines: Structural and behavioral dynamics in the formation of R&D communities : a research agenda. Cambridge, Mass: Sloan School of Management, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1990.

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Bootlegging Apples. Insomniac Press, 2000.

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Augsdorfer, Peter. Handbook on Bootlegging. WORLD SCIENTIFIC (EUROPE), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/q0361.

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Estopinal, Stephen. Solitario: Bootlegging on the Bayou. Independently Published, 2018.

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Butts, Ed. Outlaws of the Lakes: Bootlegging & Smuggling. Lynx Images Inc., 2004.

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Book chapters on the topic "Bootlegging"

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Popkova, Anna. "From Bootlegging Hollywood to Streaming Battle Rap." In World Entertainment Media, 87–95. New York, NY : Routledge, 2020.: Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315106298-10.

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Eicher, Stephan. "The relationship between bootlegging and management practices – A quantitative study." In Uncovering Covert Innovation, 113–66. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31620-4_4.

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Hooi, Lai Wan, and Nguyen Nhat Tan. "Agile Leadership and Bootlegging Behavior: Does Leadership Coping Dynamics Matter?" In Agile Coping in the Digital Workplace, 187–202. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-70228-1_10.

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Eicher, Stephan. "What the literature tells us about bootlegging in R&D – a systematic literature review." In Uncovering Covert Innovation, 11–42. Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-658-31620-4_2.

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"10 Bootlegging Ladies." In Jazz Age Cocktails, 93–98. New York University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9781479810154.003.0013.

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Hilderbrand, Lucas. "[Bootlegging Video] (2009)." In Video Theories. Bloomsbury Academic, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781501354120.0080.

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Balsom, Erika. "Bootlegging Experimental Film." In After Uniqueness, 81–105. Columbia University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7312/columbia/9780231176934.003.0004.

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This chapter explores the ambivalence of the copy by examining the impact of low-quality, unauthorized digital bootlegs on the domain of experimental film, an area of practice that has historically exhibited a strong investment in medium specificity and the moral rights of the filmmaker. I confront these issues through a case study of Josiah McElheny’s The Past Was A Mirage I’d Left Far Behind (2010), a year-long installation at the Whitechapel Gallery in London that consisted of copies of historical abstract films taken from UbuWeb – an online repository of low-definition files posted without permission of the filmmakers – and projected onto prismatic screens.
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Dorr, Lisa Lindquist. "Second Only to Bootlegging." In A Thousand Thirsty Beaches, 127–58. University of North Carolina Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5149/northcarolina/9781469643274.003.0005.

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Even as distillers around the world shipped their products to Cuba to be smuggled into the United States to circumvent Prohibition, immigrants from around the world made their way to Havana to be smuggled into the United States to circumvent new laws restricting immigration. The two forms of contraband cargoes utilized the same routes, the same organizations, and even the same boats. Smugglers also brought narcotics into the United States illegally as well, seeking to increase their profits. Bureaucratic confusion among the agencies seeking to stem liquor smuggling and immigrant smuggling hampered enforcement of both laws, allowing the smuggling of both illegal cargoes to continue.
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"3. Bootlegging Experimental Film." In After Uniqueness, 81–105. Columbia University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.7312/bals17692-005.

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Augsdorfer, Peter. "The Basics of Bootlegging." In Corporate Underground, 59–74. WORLD SCIENTIFIC (EUROPE), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/9781800612266_0002.

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Conference papers on the topic "Bootlegging"

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Uvarov, S. N. "Anti-Alcohol Campaign of 1985–1988 as a Factor Demographic Processes: Analysis of Regional Historiography." In XII Ural Demographic Forum “Paradigms and models of demographic development”. Institute of Economics of the Ural Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.17059/udf-2021-1-22.

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The article analyses the historical literature on the anti-alcohol campaign of 1985–1988 in Russian regions. It is concluded that some of the works do not consider the impact of the campaign on demographic changes, while the reduction in the volume of sales and consumption of alcoholic beverages, a decrease in the number of alcoholics, alcoholic psychosis, fight against bootlegging, alcoholic crimes are examined in detail. A decrease in mortality, an increase in the birth rate, an increase in the life expectancy of the population in the context of the fight against alcoholism are touched upon only in a number of studies (for example, in materials from Western Siberia, Udmurtia, Bashkiria). The problem is most studied in the Udmurt Republic, where the influence of the campaign on marriage and divorce was also considered. Additionally, in Udmurtia, the ethnic component of the influence of the anti-alcohol campaign on demographic processes was analysed. Therefore, it was concluded that the greatest reduction in mortality occurred among the Udmurts living in rural areas.
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Reports on the topic "Bootlegging"

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Thursby, Marie, and Jerry Thursby. Interstate Cigarette Bootlegging: Extent, Revenue Losses, and Effects of Government Intervention. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research, June 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.3386/w4763.

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