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Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

2012

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Intellectual Property Law

American University Washington College of Law

Licensing

Articles 1 - 4 of 4

Full-Text Articles in Law

Confronting The Crisis In Scientific Publishing: Latency, Licensing And Access, Jorge L. Contreras Oct 2012

Confronting The Crisis In Scientific Publishing: Latency, Licensing And Access, Jorge L. Contreras

Joint PIJIP/TLS Research Paper Series

The serials crisis in scientific publishing can be traced to the long duration of copyright protection and the assignment of copyright by researchers to publishers. Over-protection of scientific literature has enabled commercial publishers to increase subscription rates to a point at which access to scientific information has been curtailed with negative social welfare consequences. The uniformity costs imposed by such over-protection can be addressed by tailoring intellectual property rights, either through legal change or private ordering.

Current open access channels of distribution offer alternative approaches to scientific publishing, but neither the Green OA self-archiving nor the Gold OA author-pays models …


Digestion And Re-Innovation: A Lesson Learned From China´S High-Speed Rail Technology-Transfer Agreements, Joe Massie Apr 2012

Digestion And Re-Innovation: A Lesson Learned From China´S High-Speed Rail Technology-Transfer Agreements, Joe Massie

Intellectual Property Brief

No abstract provided.


Dc Comics Sues Gotham Garage Over Replica Batmobiles, Jeff Kettle Apr 2012

Dc Comics Sues Gotham Garage Over Replica Batmobiles, Jeff Kettle

Intellectual Property Brief

No abstract provided.


Copyright’S Creative Hierarchy In The Performing Arts, Michael W. Carroll Jan 2012

Copyright’S Creative Hierarchy In The Performing Arts, Michael W. Carroll

Articles in Law Reviews & Other Academic Journals

Copyright law grants authors certain rights of creative control over their works. This Article argues that these rights of creative control are too strong when applied to the performing arts because they fail to take account of the mutual dependence between writers and performers to fully realize the work in performance. This failure is particularly problematic in cases in which the author of a source work, such as a play or a choreographic work, imposes content-based restrictions on how a third party may render the work in performance. This Article then explores how Congress might craft a statutory license to …