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== Invitation from Sarah Hsai Hall ==
== Course Description ==
Dear all:
[[File:SCH.jpg|right]]
** UPDATED FOR 2014 **


Happy New Year!!
The Jamaican section of this EdX Copyright course endeavors to bring together Jamaican jurists, lawyers, policy makers, and stakeholders from the creative industries to achieve a deeper understanding of the relevance and potential of copyright for Jamaica. Participation will be limited to facilitate an in-depth and engaged in-person discussion each week.


I am writing with further details on the section of the Harvard EdX Copyright Course that we are organizing for Jamaica. If, after reading below, you are still interested in the course, please respond to me by email by no later than January 15th indicating your interest, and whether you would prefer to meet on a Saturday (morning or afternoon) or a Sunday (morning or afternoon) at Norman Manley Law School at UWI Mona campus, or on a Thursday or Friday evening at another location to be determined.
The course will be offered over 8 weeks beginning the week of June 9, 2014. The recorded lecture will be available to watch at your convenience online.


The Jamaican section of this EdX Copyright course endeavors to bring together Jamaican jurists, lawyers, policy makers, and stakeholders from the creative industries to achieve a deeper understanding of the relevance and potential of copyright for Jamaica. Participation will be limited to 10-15 participants to facilitate an in-depth and engaged in-person discussion each week.
There will then be a set of assigned readings each week to prepare for our local discussion section. These are linked below, you can access them by clicking on the topic for a given week.


The course will be offered over 12 weeks beginning the week of January 28th. The recorded lecture will be available to watch at your convenience online beginning on Tuesday of each week (this will be the same lecture as viewed by HLS students enrolled in the Copyright course). There will also be six "special events" over the course of the semester (guest lectures and panels on Copyright topics) - these will be live streamed on the Internet on certain Wednesdays at 7pm.
Our discussion section will meet on Thursday evenings from 6-8pm at NMLS.


There will then be a set of assigned readings each week to prepare for our local discussion section. I will be tailoring these readings for both content and length, to make them relevant and manageable for our group, and will endeavor to make them take not more than 1-2 hours per week.
The course is taught by Professor William (Terry) Fisher, the Wilmer Hale Professor of Intellectual Property Law at Harvard Law School, and Director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Our local section will be led by Sarah Hsia Hall, a 2003 graduate of Harvard Law School and Intellectual Property and Entertainment attorney (admitted in NY and Jamaica), with participation from Professor Charles Nesson, Weld Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.  


Our discussion section will meet in person for 1.5 hours weekly, most likely on Saturday or Sunday at NMLS; however, if most people wish to meet on an evening during the week, I can try and accommodate that, but will need to find a different place to meet. 
At the end of the course, participants may opt to submit a take-home exam, and, if successful, will then receive a certificate confirming your participation and successful completion of the course.
 
We will break for the Easter holiday. Depending on the recording schedule for the lectures, there may not be a lecture/discussion section available the week of March 18-22, as this is the week of Spring Break for HLS (and the HLS course and other EdX sections will pause for that week).
 
The course is taught by Professor William (Terry) Fisher, the Wilmer Hale Professor of Intellectual Property Law at Harvard Law School, and Director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Our local section will be led by me, a 2003 graduate of Harvard Law School and Intellectual Property and Entertainment attorney (admitted in NY), with participation from Professor Charles Nesson, Weld Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.
 
Lecture topics:
The Foundations of Copyright Law
Fairness and Personality Theories
The Subject Matter of Copyright
Welfare Theory
Authorship
The Mechanics of Copyright
The Rights to Reproduce and Modify
The Rights to Distribute, Perform and Display
Fair Use and Misuse
Cultural Theory
Supplements to Copyright: Secondary Liability and Para-copyright
Remedies
 
At the end of the course, participants will be asked to complete a brief assignment, the purpose of which is not to test your retention of the material covered, but rather to apply concepts prospectively, to address the issue of the role Copyright can and should play for Jamaica.  You will then receive a certificate confirming your participation and successful completion of the course.
 
Please remember to confirm your interest as soon as possible.  Looking forward to meeting you all later this month!
 
Best,
 
Sarah


== Introduction to CopyrightX Materials==
== Introduction to CopyrightX Materials==
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This set of materials is designed to provide readers an introduction to the main principles and characteristics of copyright law.  It is not a treatise; readers looking for a comprehensive and detailed examination of the copyright system should instead consult the sources listed at the bottom of this page.
This set of materials is designed to provide readers an introduction to the main principles and characteristics of copyright law.  It is not a treatise; readers looking for a comprehensive and detailed examination of the copyright system should instead consult the sources listed at the bottom of this page.


The materials are designed to accompany CopyrightX, a free online course taught by [http://www.tfisher.org/ William Fisher] under the auspices of [https://www.edx.org/university_profile/HarvardX HarvardX].  The materials are licenced under a [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Creative Commons Attribution license].  The public at large is encouraged to use, distribute, translate, modify, and build upon these materials, provided that William Fisher and HarvardX are given appropriate credit.
The materials are designed to accompany CopyrightX, a free online course taught by [http://www.tfisher.org/ William Fisher] under the auspices of [https://www.edx.org/university_profile/HarvardX HarvardX].  The materials are licensed under a [http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/ Creative Commons Attribution license].  The public at large is encouraged to use, distribute, translate, modify, and build upon these materials, provided that William Fisher and HarvardX are given appropriate credit.


===Disclaimer===
===Disclaimer===
Line 52: Line 27:
===Help Us Improve the Materials===
===Help Us Improve the Materials===


We hope to update and refine these materials periodically.  To do so, we need help from users.  Please let us know if a piece of information contained in a module is incorrect or out of date.  If you have suggestions concerning either the content of the modules or the way in which the content is presented, we are eager to hear them.  You can make these suggestions in either of two ways.  First, if you would like your suggestion to be available to the public, please click on the "Discussion" tab at the top of the page to which your suggestion is relevant.  Second, you can simply email us at ____.
We hope to update and refine these materials periodically.  To do so, we need help from users.  Please let us know if a piece of information contained in a module is incorrect or out of date.  If you have suggestions concerning either the content of the modules or the way in which the content is presented, we are eager to hear them.  You can make these suggestions in either of two ways.  First, if you would like your suggestion to be available to the public, please click on the "Discussion" tab at the top of the page to which your suggestion is relevant.  Second, you can simply email us at sarahhsia at gmail dot com.




<div style="font-size: 105%; font-weight:bold; padding:0.4em; background-color:#ffffcc; border-bottom:1px solid #ffcc00; text-align: center;">Contents</div>
<div style="font-size: 105%; font-weight:bold; padding:0.4em; background-color:#ffffcc; border-bottom:1px solid #ffcc00; text-align: center;">Contents</div>
<div style="background:#ffffff; padding:0.2em 0.4em 0.2em 0.4em;">
{| style="border: 0; margin: 0;" cellpadding="3"
| valign="top" |


'''Course Materials:'''
'''Lectures'''
* '''[[The_International_Framework_of_Copyright_Law]]'''
[[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/tfisher/Copyright_Lectures_2013.htm Copyright Lectures]]
* '''[[The_Requirements_for_Copyright_Protection]]'''
 
* '''[[The_Subject_Matter_of_Copyright]]'''
'''Syllabus and Readings:'''
* '''[[Alternatives_to_Copyright]]'''
* '''Week 1: The Foundations of Copyright Law and Fairness / Labor Theory'''
* '''[[Authorship]]'''
Watch Lectures 1 and 2 (Introduction and Fairness Theory. 
* '''[[Copyright_Machinery]]'''
Read '''[[The_International_Framework_of_Copyright_Law-JA]]''' and '''[[The_Requirements_for_Copyright_Protection-JA]]''' and '''[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/tfisher/IP/Fisher_IP_Theories.pdf Fairness_and_Personality_Theories-JA]'''
* '''[[Copyright_Entitlements]]'''
* '''Week 2: The Subject Matter of Copyright and Cultural Theory'''
* '''[[Copyright_Exceptions_and_Limitations]]'''
Watch Lectures 3 and 10. 
* '''[[Moral_Rights]]'''
Read '''[[The_Subject_Matter_of_Copyright-JA]]'''
* '''[[Traditional_Knowledge]]'''
* '''Week 3: Authorship and Personality Theory'''
* '''[[Copyright_Supplements]]'''
Watch Lecture 5 and 2 (Personality Theory). 
* '''[[Copyright_Litigation]]'''
Read '''[[Authorship-JA]]'''  
* '''Week 4: The Mechanics of Copyright'''
Watch Lecture 6. 
Read '''[[The_Mechanics_of_Copyright-JA]]'''
* '''Week 5: The Rights to Reproduce and Modify'''
Watch Lecture 7. 
Read '''The Rights to Reproduce and Modify''' - '''[[Copyright_Entitlements-JA]]'''
* '''Week 6: The Rights to Distribute, Perform and Display'''
Watch Lecture 8. 
Read '''The Rights to Distribute, Perform and Display''' - '''[[Copyright_Entitlements-JA]]'''
* '''Week 7: Fair Use and Welfare Theory'''
Watch Lectures 9 and 4 (parts 1 and 2). 
Read '''Fair Use and Misuse''' - '''[[Copyright_Exceptions_and_Limitations-JA]]''' and '''[http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/tfisher/PTKChapter6.pdf Welfare Theory-JA]''' (try to read at least pp. 1-4, 16-32 and 41-42)
* '''Week 8: Remedies and Supplements to Copyright'''
Watch Lectures 12 and 11 (part 1). 
Read '''Remedies''' - '''[[Copyright_Litigation]]''' and '''Supplements to Copyright: Secondary Liability and Para-copyright''' - '''[[Copyright_Supplements]]''' and '''[[Traditional_Knowledge-JA]]'''
 
* '''[[Glossary]]'''
* '''[[Glossary]]'''
'''[[Contributors]]'''
'''[[Contributors]]'''
</div>


==[[image:resource.png|50px|]] Additional resources ==
==[[image:resource.png|50px|]] Additional resources ==
Line 99: Line 85:


A map, prepared by William Fisher, describing the main features of copyright law in the United States and, to a limited extent, other countries, is available [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/tfisher/IP/IP%20Maps.htm here].
A map, prepared by William Fisher, describing the main features of copyright law in the United States and, to a limited extent, other countries, is available [http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/tfisher/IP/IP%20Maps.htm here].
</div>

Latest revision as of 13:17, 31 May 2014

Course Description

SCH.jpg
    • UPDATED FOR 2014 **

The Jamaican section of this EdX Copyright course endeavors to bring together Jamaican jurists, lawyers, policy makers, and stakeholders from the creative industries to achieve a deeper understanding of the relevance and potential of copyright for Jamaica. Participation will be limited to facilitate an in-depth and engaged in-person discussion each week.

The course will be offered over 8 weeks beginning the week of June 9, 2014. The recorded lecture will be available to watch at your convenience online.

There will then be a set of assigned readings each week to prepare for our local discussion section. These are linked below, you can access them by clicking on the topic for a given week.

Our discussion section will meet on Thursday evenings from 6-8pm at NMLS.

The course is taught by Professor William (Terry) Fisher, the Wilmer Hale Professor of Intellectual Property Law at Harvard Law School, and Director of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society. Our local section will be led by Sarah Hsia Hall, a 2003 graduate of Harvard Law School and Intellectual Property and Entertainment attorney (admitted in NY and Jamaica), with participation from Professor Charles Nesson, Weld Professor of Law at Harvard Law School and founder of the Berkman Center for Internet and Society.

At the end of the course, participants may opt to submit a take-home exam, and, if successful, will then receive a certificate confirming your participation and successful completion of the course.

Introduction to CopyrightX Materials

This set of materials is designed to provide readers an introduction to the main principles and characteristics of copyright law. It is not a treatise; readers looking for a comprehensive and detailed examination of the copyright system should instead consult the sources listed at the bottom of this page.

The materials are designed to accompany CopyrightX, a free online course taught by William Fisher under the auspices of HarvardX. The materials are licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license. The public at large is encouraged to use, distribute, translate, modify, and build upon these materials, provided that William Fisher and HarvardX are given appropriate credit.

Disclaimer

These materials do not offer legal advice. They provide general information concerning the principles that underlie the copyright system and indicate how various concrete problems are resolved in most countries. They cannot, however, provide reliable guidance concerning how a court in a specific country would respond to a specific set of facts. Thus, if you find yourself coming close to any of the legal boundaries described herein, you should consult a lawyer in your own jurisdiction.

Help Us Improve the Materials

We hope to update and refine these materials periodically. To do so, we need help from users. Please let us know if a piece of information contained in a module is incorrect or out of date. If you have suggestions concerning either the content of the modules or the way in which the content is presented, we are eager to hear them. You can make these suggestions in either of two ways. First, if you would like your suggestion to be available to the public, please click on the "Discussion" tab at the top of the page to which your suggestion is relevant. Second, you can simply email us at sarahhsia at gmail dot com.


Contents

Lectures [Copyright Lectures]

Syllabus and Readings:

  • Week 1: The Foundations of Copyright Law and Fairness / Labor Theory

Watch Lectures 1 and 2 (Introduction and Fairness Theory. Read The_International_Framework_of_Copyright_Law-JA and The_Requirements_for_Copyright_Protection-JA and Fairness_and_Personality_Theories-JA

  • Week 2: The Subject Matter of Copyright and Cultural Theory

Watch Lectures 3 and 10. Read The_Subject_Matter_of_Copyright-JA

  • Week 3: Authorship and Personality Theory

Watch Lecture 5 and 2 (Personality Theory). Read Authorship-JA

  • Week 4: The Mechanics of Copyright

Watch Lecture 6. Read The_Mechanics_of_Copyright-JA

  • Week 5: The Rights to Reproduce and Modify

Watch Lecture 7. Read The Rights to Reproduce and Modify - Copyright_Entitlements-JA

  • Week 6: The Rights to Distribute, Perform and Display

Watch Lecture 8. Read The Rights to Distribute, Perform and Display - Copyright_Entitlements-JA

  • Week 7: Fair Use and Welfare Theory

Watch Lectures 9 and 4 (parts 1 and 2). Read Fair Use and Misuse - Copyright_Exceptions_and_Limitations-JA and Welfare Theory-JA (try to read at least pp. 1-4, 16-32 and 41-42)

  • Week 8: Remedies and Supplements to Copyright

Watch Lectures 12 and 11 (part 1). Read Remedies - Copyright_Litigation and Supplements to Copyright: Secondary Liability and Para-copyright - Copyright_Supplements and Traditional_Knowledge-JA

Contributors

Resource.png Additional resources

The two leading treatises on copyright law in the United States are Nimmer on Copyright and Goldstein on Copyright.

A thorough discussion of international copyright law may be found in Paul Edward Geller, ed., International Copyright Law and Practice (2 volumes, Matthew Bender), although its coverage of developing and transitional countries is thin. Other useful paper treatises include Paul Goldstein, International Copyright: Principles, Law, and Practice (Oxford University Press) and Silke von Lewinski, International Copyright Law and Policy (Oxford University Press 2008).

An excellent compendium of the copyright laws in over 100 countries has been assembled by UNESCO: Collection of National Copyright Laws.

The Research Center for the Legal System of Intellectual Property (RCLIP), in cooperation with the Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property (CASRIP) of the University of Washington School of Law, is building a comprehensive database of court decisions involving intellectual property (including copyright law) in every country throughout the world. The database is not yet complete but already constitutes a highly valuable research tool, particularly for Asian countries.

A much shorter discussion of how the scope of copyright law has increased over time may be found in William Fisher, "Geistiges Eigentum - ein ausufernder Rechtsbereich: Die Geschichte des Ideenschutzes in den Vereinigten Staaten," in Eigentum im internationalen Vergleich (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1999), 265-91 (English version available as: The Growth of Intellectual Property: A History of the Ownership of Ideas in the United States).

A more recent and more extended discussion of the same topic is James Boyle, The Public Domain: Enclosing the Commons of the Mind)) (Yale University Press 2008) (available for free online).

The best commentary on copyright law in general and its scope in particular remains a book published in 1967 by Benjamin Kaplan: An Unhurried View of Copyright. Sadly, it is only available in print.

A comprehensive discussion of the aspects of copyright law that affect librarians -- and, in particular, librarians in developing countries -- may be found in the eIFL Handbook on Copyright and Related Issues for Libraries.

A short debate between Professors William Fisher and Justin Hughes((.link_red)), organized in May 2009 by the Economist magazine, examines the merits and demerits of the copyright system.

A map, prepared by William Fisher, describing the main features of copyright law in the United States and, to a limited extent, other countries, is available here.