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

Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law Commons

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

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Entertainment, Arts, and Sports Law

Fashion Law – A Guide For Designers, Fashion Executives, And Attorneys, Cory Greenberg May 2011

Fashion Law – A Guide For Designers, Fashion Executives, And Attorneys, Cory Greenberg

Pace Intellectual Property, Sports & Entertainment Law Forum

Cory Greenberg writes a comprehensive book review of Fashion Law: A Guide for Designers, Fashion Executives, and Attorneys by Guillermo C. Jimenez and Barbara Kolsun. Fashion Law is divided into four sections: Introduction, Intellectual Property Issues, Commercial Operations and Expansions, and International Aspects. Greenberg provides an objective review of each section of the book and comments on the growth of fashion in the legal world.


In A Post Graham World: Choreographing Dance Rights In The World Of Media, Technology And Social Networking, Michelle N. Burkhart May 2011

In A Post Graham World: Choreographing Dance Rights In The World Of Media, Technology And Social Networking, Michelle N. Burkhart

Pace Intellectual Property, Sports & Entertainment Law Forum

Michelle Burkhart writes an article diagramming the Choreographing Dance Rights in today’s social media world. Her article highlights the famous Martha Graham case and in detail describes: Works for higher art; and responsiveness within the dance community. Burkhart provides an interesting take on how technology has drastically changed the world of dance.


No Bitin’ Allowed: A Hip-Hop Copying Paradigm For All Of Us, Horace E. Anderson Jr. Jan 2011

No Bitin’ Allowed: A Hip-Hop Copying Paradigm For All Of Us, Horace E. Anderson Jr.

Elisabeth Haub School of Law Faculty Publications

It is long past time to reform the Copyright Act. The law of copyright in the United States is at one of its periodic inflection points. In the past, major technological change and major shifts in the way copyrightable works were used have rightly led to major changes in the law. The invention of the printing press prompted the first codification of copyright. The popularity of the player piano contributed to a reevaluation of how musical works should be protected. The dawn of the computer age led to an explicit expansion of copyrightable subject matter to include computer programs. These …