CopyrightX: Jamaica 2013
Course Description
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.
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.
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 Saturday mornings at NMLS in Room 5.
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), 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 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.
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 licenced 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 ____.
Course Materials:
|