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Codification of European Copyright Law : Challenges and Perspectives.
2012
N 721 SYN.C
Available at WIPO Library
Items
Details
Title
Codification of European Copyright Law : Challenges and Perspectives.
Item Type
Book
Description
380 pages ; 25 cm.
ISBN
9789041141453 Print
Alternate Call Number
N 721 SYN.C
Summary
Intellectual property scholars often argue that a European Copyright Code is unnecessary, undesirable, and perhaps impossible. It is certainly true that drafting rules for the European copyright law of the future is a sensitive and risky task. However, the intersection between the present and the future, the delicate point where it is felt that one era is fading away and a new dawn is breaking, has arrived for European copyright law; and moreover, the Lisbon Treaty has provided an explicit legal basis for an EU copyright policy. At this moment, all views, interests, concerns, and expectations should be weighed in order to establish the next step forward from this critical stage. Such a wide-ranging evaluation was the objective of an international conference held in Nicosia, Cyprus, in April 2011. This book reprints the papers presented at that conference, touching on such issues as the following: rules of copyright ownership and allocation of rights; codification techniques; copyright exceptions and limitations; copyright as a public interest question; claims of culture and human rights; economic rights of the author; enforcement of copyright; EU harmonization of copyright; interoperability; media as tangible objects; moral rights; the duration of copyright; the notion of the “public”; the role of fundamental rights; the concept of work; employment relationships, commission contracts, and collective works; copyright licensing; and the concept of “fair use”.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Formatted Contents Note
Part 1: The Methods of European Copyright Harmonization.
Chapter 1. The Legal Foundations of European Copyright Law; T. Georgopoulos.
Chapter 2. The European Legislator’s Strategy in the Field of Copyright Harmonization; F. Gotzen.
Chapter 3. The Plurality of Legal Systems in Copyright Law: An Obstacle to a European Codification? P. Jougleux .
Chapter 4. CJUE Policy and Practice in the Field of European Copyright Law; D. Kallinikou .
Part 2: The acquis of European Copyright Harmonization.
Chapter 1. The Foundations of the Concept of Work in European Copyright Law; T.-E. Synodinou.
Chapter 2. The acquis communautaire in the Area of Copyright and Related Rights: Economic Rights; A. Lucas-Schloetter.
Chapter 3. Defining the Scope of Protection of Copyright in the EU: The Need to Reconsider the acquis Regarding Limitations and Exceptions; C. Geiger, F. Schönherr.
Chapter 4. Duration of Copyright and Related Rights; H. Pisuke.
Chapter 5. Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights; P. Cámara Águila.
Part 3: The Gaps in European Copyright Harmonization.
Chapter 1. Authorship and Ownership: Authors, Entrepreneurs and Rights; A. Quaedvlieg.
Chapter 2. Moral right; I. Kikkis.
Chapter 3 . Copyright Contracts; S. von Lewinski.
Chapter 4. An Essential Brick in the European Copyright Building: A Regulation of Copyright Transactions; J. de Werra.
Chapter 5. The Legal Struggle in the EU against Online Piracy; I. Iglezakis.
Chapter 6. Interoperability and European Copyright Law Codification; C. Bernault.
Part 4: Perspectives and Reflections on the European Codification of Copyright Law.
Chapter 1. The Perspective of the Introduction of a European Fair Use Clause; P.L.C. Torremans.
Chapter 2 . The Wittem Group’s European Copyright Code; P.B. Hugenholtz.
Chapter 3. Reflections on a European Copyright Codification; R. Hilty .
Chapter 4 . European Copyright Codification; A. Lucas.
Chapter 1. The Legal Foundations of European Copyright Law; T. Georgopoulos.
Chapter 2. The European Legislator’s Strategy in the Field of Copyright Harmonization; F. Gotzen.
Chapter 3. The Plurality of Legal Systems in Copyright Law: An Obstacle to a European Codification? P. Jougleux .
Chapter 4. CJUE Policy and Practice in the Field of European Copyright Law; D. Kallinikou .
Part 2: The acquis of European Copyright Harmonization.
Chapter 1. The Foundations of the Concept of Work in European Copyright Law; T.-E. Synodinou.
Chapter 2. The acquis communautaire in the Area of Copyright and Related Rights: Economic Rights; A. Lucas-Schloetter.
Chapter 3. Defining the Scope of Protection of Copyright in the EU: The Need to Reconsider the acquis Regarding Limitations and Exceptions; C. Geiger, F. Schönherr.
Chapter 4. Duration of Copyright and Related Rights; H. Pisuke.
Chapter 5. Enforcement of Intellectual Property Rights; P. Cámara Águila.
Part 3: The Gaps in European Copyright Harmonization.
Chapter 1. Authorship and Ownership: Authors, Entrepreneurs and Rights; A. Quaedvlieg.
Chapter 2. Moral right; I. Kikkis.
Chapter 3 . Copyright Contracts; S. von Lewinski.
Chapter 4. An Essential Brick in the European Copyright Building: A Regulation of Copyright Transactions; J. de Werra.
Chapter 5. The Legal Struggle in the EU against Online Piracy; I. Iglezakis.
Chapter 6. Interoperability and European Copyright Law Codification; C. Bernault.
Part 4: Perspectives and Reflections on the European Codification of Copyright Law.
Chapter 1. The Perspective of the Introduction of a European Fair Use Clause; P.L.C. Torremans.
Chapter 2 . The Wittem Group’s European Copyright Code; P.B. Hugenholtz.
Chapter 3. Reflections on a European Copyright Codification; R. Hilty .
Chapter 4 . European Copyright Codification; A. Lucas.
Series
Published
Alphen aan den Rijn, The Netherlands : Kluwer Law International, 2012.
Language
English
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