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Copyright law

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A New Uneasy Case For Copyright, Michael B. Abramowicz Jan 2011

A New Uneasy Case For Copyright, Michael B. Abramowicz

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Justice Stephen Breyer’s The Uneasy Case for Copyright is known for calling the attention of policymakers and scholars to the incentives-access paradigm of copyright law. Less-discussed, however, is its suggestion that copyright protection might inefficiently draw resources into the creation of copyrightable works given the potential spillover benefits of alternative uses to which creators might otherwise put their time. Although a full study of alternative career paths would be empirically challenging, one can simplify by asking what benefit society obtains from marginal copyrightable works – those that might not be created if copyright incentives were less robust – and whether …


A Theory Of Copyright's Derivative Right And Related Doctrines, Michael B. Abramowicz Jan 2005

A Theory Of Copyright's Derivative Right And Related Doctrines, Michael B. Abramowicz

GW Law Faculty Publications & Other Works

Borrowing from the rent dissipation literature that has proven useful in patent analysis, in this Article I provide an economic foundation for copyright’s derivative right to prepare sequels and adaptations and suggest a straightforward doctrinal test for that right. I argue that the suppression of competition in creating adaptations of the same copyrighted expression, rather than being a loss, might instead be the derivative right’s chief economic virtue, giving an author control over adaptations and limiting the production of those that would be close substitutes for one another. In Part I, I explain and question the conventional justification of the …