Module 2: The International Framework
By Petroula Vantsiouri and William Fisher
Learning objective
This module describes the main instruments of the international copyright framework, the impact of that framework on developing countries, and opportunities for developing countries to influence the development or interpretation of the framework.
Case study
“I want to participate to an international exchange program, what should I know?”
Nadia is currently working as a librarian in Mexico and has a very good knowledge of the copyright protection law in her country. Nadia is interested in applying for an exchange program for librarians in order to work for six months in another country. The countries she is considering working in are Ethiopia, Russia, India and Belgium.
However, one of the requirements for participating in the exchange program is that she understands the general framework of copyright protection in the country that she will be working. More specifically she has to understand the following issues: - general standards of protection of copyrighted works, - protection of performers and producers of recordings, - copyright protection of computer programs and databases, - intellectual property rights of performers and of producers of phonograms.
Another librarian advised her to check whether the aforementioned countries have signed the same treaties that Mexico has signed, so that their copyright law resembles Mexican law to the extent required by such treaties. Nadia should however take also into account whether these treaties have an effective enforcement mechanism that ensures that the countries have transposed their provisions into their national law.
The Rationale for the International System
As we saw in Module 1: Copyright and the public domain: an introduction, each country in the world has its own set of copyright laws. However, the flexibility that each country enjoys in adjusting and enforcing its own laws is limited by a set of international treaties. Why? Why do we need any international management of this field?
There are two traditional answers to that question. First, in the absence of international controls, each country would be inclined to discriminate in favor of its own citizens or residents and against foreigners. Indeed, in the nineteenth century, before any international regulations were imposed, such discrimination was common.
Second, individual authors would find it very difficult to learn and comply with the idiosyncratic rules adopted by every country in the world. Thus, some degree of harmonization of the laws of separate countries seems necessary to enable authors to obtain effective copyright protection globally.
Recently, a third answer has been added to the first two. In the judgment of some copyright owners – in particular, record companies, film studios, and software firms – developing countries are insufficiently appreciative of the benefits of a copyright system. On this view, treaties are necessary to compel those countries to adopt economically and socially beneficial copyright regimes. As one might imagine, the representatives of developing countries often disagree.
International instruments
You might expect that a single treaty, binding on all countries, would most effectively advance the three goals just mentioned. Unfortunately, the current situation is more complex. Instead of one treaty, we now have six major multilateral agreements, each with a different set of member countries.
Each of the six agreements was negotiated within – and is now administered by – an international organization. Four of the six are managed by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), one by the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and one (arguably the most important one) by the World Trade Organization (WTO).
The ways in which the six agreements have been created and implemented have been similar. Typically, the process begins when representatives of a group of countries agree that a particular set of issues requires harmonization. They enter into negotiations, which can last several years. During the negotiations, draft provisions are presented to the delegations of each state, which then discuss them and may propose amendments to their content. Once consensus has been reached, the states conclude the treaty by signing it. Thereafter, the governments of the participating countries ratify the treaty, whereupon it enters into force. From that moment onward, the signatory states assume obligations towards the other countries to implement the international agreement. States that did not sign the treaty when it was initially concluded may join the treaty later by accession.
None of the treaties contains a comprehensive recipe for the creation of a copyright system. Rather, each one requires member countries to deal with particular issues in particular ways, but leaves to the member states considerable discretion in implementing its requirements. Nor do any of the treaties bind individual persons within the member countries. Until and unless the governments of those countries adopt implementing legislation, they have no impact on their citizens or residents.
More about the stages of an international agreement here (1).
Set forth below are brief descriptions of the six major treaties, with special attention to their impacts on developing countries.
Berne Convention
The uncertainty and confusion that generated the lack of a unified framework for the protection of copyright led ten European States in 1886 to sign the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works (henceforth Berne Convention). Since then, a total of 164 countries have joined the Convention. Any nation is permitted to join.
You can check if your country is a member of the Berne Convention on: http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ShowResults.jsp?lang=en&treaty_id=15. The following map indicates the countries that today are members:
The Berne Convention established three fundamental principles. The first and most famous is the principle of the “national treatment,” which requires member countries to give the residents of other member countries the same rights with respect to copyright law that they give to their own residents. So, for example, a novel written in France by a French citizen enjoys the same protection in Italy as a novel written in Italy by an Italian citizen.
The second is the principle of “independence” of protection. It provides that each member country must give foreign works the same protections they give domestic works, even when the foreign works would not be shielded under the copyright laws of the countries where they originated. For example, even if a novel written in Belgium by a Belgian national were not protected under Belgian law, it would still be protected in Italy, if it fulfilled the requirements for protection under Italian law.
The third is the principle of the “automatic protection.” It forbids member countries to make copyright protection depend upon compliance with any formalities. In other words, in Berne Convention countries, original works enjoy copyright protection automatically from the moment they are created. So, for example, the British author of a novel doesn’t have to register or declare her novel in France, Italy, Belgium or any other member state of the Convention; her novel will be automatically protected in all of these countries from the moment she has written it.
In addition to these basic principles, the Berne Convention also imposes on member countries a number of more specific requirements. For instance, they must enforce copyrights for a minimum period of time: namely, the life of the author plus 50 years. The Convention also requires its members to recognize and enforce a subset of the “moral rights” discussed in Module 1: Copyright and the public domain: an introduction.
When the Berne convention was revised in Paris in 1971, the signatory states included an Appendix, which contained special provisions concerning developing countries. In particular, developing countries may, for certain works and under certain conditions, depart from these minimum standards of protection with regard to the right of translation and the right of reproduction. More specifically, the Appendix permits developing countries to grant non-exclusive and non-transferable compulsory licenses in respect of translation for the purpose of teaching, scholarship or research, and reproduction for use in connection with systematic instructional activities of works protected under the Berne Convention.
Due to the general and abstract content of most provisions of the Berne Convention, each national legislature enjoys considerable flexibility in implementing the Treaty. For example, in the Berne Convention Implementation Act of 1988, the U.S. Congress adopted a “minimalist” approach to implementation, making only those changes to copyright law that were absolutely necessary to qualify it for membership.
Furthermore, at the time that Berne the Convention was signed, the signatory countries did not establish an enforcement mechanism. Thus, even if one member state did not implement fully in its national legislation the rules set by the Convention, the other signatory states had little power either to force the recalcitrant country to comply with its obligations or to punish it for not doing so. It could be said that the Berne Convention was a treaty without “teeth.” As we will see later on, this situation partially changed for the members of the Berne Convention that also joined the World Trade Organization.
For the full text of the Convention, see http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/berne/trtdocs_wo001.html.
More about the Berne Convention, click here (2).
Rome Convention (1961)
Technological progress – in particular, the invention of devices, such as tape recorders, that allowed creative works to be reproduced easily – created a perceived need for enhanced protections for the performers and producers of recordings. The Berne Convention, which was primarily concerned with the circulation of printed materials, was ineffective for this purpose. To address this need, the Rome Convention for the Protection of Performers, Producers of Phonograms and Broadcasting Organizations was concluded by members of the WIPO on October 26, 1961. It extended copyright protection from the author of a work to the creators and owners of particular, physical embodiments of the work, such as audiocassettes and DVDs.
The Rome Convention requires member countries to grant protection to the performances of performers, the phonograms of producers of phonograms, and the broadcasts of broadcasting organizations. However, once a performer has consented to the incorporation of her performance in a visual or audiovisual fixation, the provisions on performers’ rights have no further application. Equally important, the Convention allows member countries to create certain exceptions to the rights of performers, producers of phonographs, and broadcasting organizations – for example, to permit nonpermissive uses of a work for the purpose of teaching or scientific research. 86 countries have signed the Rome Convention so far. For a list of the contracting parties, you can visit the link: http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ShowResults.jsp?lang=en&treaty_id=17. For a map indicating the Member States of the Rome Convention you can visit the link:
Not any country can join the Rome Convention; it is open only to countries that are already parties to the Berne Convention or to the Universal Copyright Convention (which we will discuss shortly). Countries that join the convention may make reservations with regard to the application of certain provisions. In practice, this has enabled countries to avoid the application of rules that would require important changes to their national laws.
For the text of the Convention, see http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/rome/trtdocs_wo024.html.
A more elaborate examination of the Rome Convention provisions, click here (3).
WIPO Copyright Treaty and WIPO Performance and Phonograms Treaty
The way that copyright owners reproduce, distribute, and market their works has changed in the digital age. Sound recordings, articles, photographs, and books are commonly stored in electronic formats, are circulated via the Internet, and are compiled in databases. Unfortunately, the same technologies that enable more efficient storage and distribution of works also facilitate widespread copyright infringement. In order to protect copyright in the new technological era and to combat what has come to be called (misleadingly) “electronic piracy,” the governments of developed countries advocated and ultimately secured two other treaties: the WIPO Copyright Treaty and the WIPO Performance and Phonograms Treaty.
The WIPO Copyright Treaty (WCT) is a special agreement accepted under the Berne Convention that entered into force on March 6, 2002. It is the first international treaty that requires countries to provide copyright protection to computer programs and to databases (compilations of data or other material).
The WCT further provides that member countries must prohibit effectively in their dominion the circumvention of technological measures set by the authors for their protection, such as decryption, as well as unauthorized modification of so-called “rights management information” (data that identify works or their authors, and that are necessary for the management of their rights).
For the text of the Treaty see http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/wct/trtdocs_wo033.html.
For a more elaborate examination of its provisions, click here (4).
The WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (WPPT) was signed by the member states of WIPO in order to enhance the intellectual property rights of performers and of producers of phonograms (vinyl records, tapes, compact discs, digital audiotapes, MP3s, and other media for storing sound recordings).
The WPPT grants performers four kinds of economic rights in their performances fixed in phonograms, three kinds of economic rights in respect of their live performances, as well as moral rights. By contrast, producers of phonograms are only granted economic rights in their phonograms.
For the text of the Treaty see http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ip/wppt/trtdocs_wo034.html.
For a more elaborate examination of the WPPT, click here (5).
Both the WCT and the WPPT (like the TRIPs Agreement, which we will consider shortly) oblige every contracting country to adopt expeditious remedies to prevent infringement of their substantive provisions.
To determine whether your country has accepted the WCT see: http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ShowResults.jsp?lang=en&treaty_id=16. For the WPPT, see: http://www.wipo.int/treaties/en/ShowResults.jsp?country_id=ALL&start_year=ANY&end_year=ANY&search_what=C&treaty_id=20
A map indicating the Member States to the WCT is available at: ; a map indicating the Member States to the WPPT is available at:
Universal Copyright Convention
The Universal Copyright Convention (or UCC), was developed by UNESCO and was adopted in Geneva in 1952, as an alternative to the Berne Convention. It was developed in order to satisfy the desire of countries, such as the U.S.A. and the Soviet Union, to participate in some form of multilateral copyright protection without joining the Berne Convention.
The UCC’s provisions are more flexible than those of the Berne Convention, intended to accommodate countries at different stages of development and countries with sharply different economic and social systems. It incorporates the principle of national treatment and prohibits any discrimination against foreign authors.
Nowadays the importance of the UCC is minimal as most countries have acceded to the Berne Convention and almost all states in the world are either members or aspiring members of the World Trade Organization, and thus conforming to the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (which we will discuss in a moment).
For the text of the Treaty see http://www.ifla.org/documents/infopol/copyright/ucc.txt For a list of the countries members of the UCC see: http://portal.unesco.org/culture/en/files/7816/11642786761conv_71_e.pdf/conv_71_e.pdf
For a more elaborate examination of the UCC, click here (6).
- The Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs)
The Agreement on Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs) is an international agreement administered by the World Trade Organization (WTO) that establishes minimum standards for many forms of intellectual property protection, including copyright. The TRIPs Agreement was negotiated and concluded in 1994. In terms of its substantive provisions, TRIPs adds little to the Berne Convention. It requires member countries to extend copyright protection to computer programs and data compilations – and thus extends the reach of the copyright regime. On the other hand, it excludes moral rights, which Berne, as we have seen, mandates. The principal innovations of the Agreement pertain, not to the substance of copyright law, but to two issues involving remedies. First, unlike Berne, the TRIPs Agreement requires member countries to provide effective sanctions for violations of copyrights. Second, it creates a a dispute resolution mechanism by which countries can be forced to comply with their treaty obligations. In other words, TRIPs has teeth. In an effort to balance public interests and the private interests of copyright owners, the TRIPs Agreement allows member states to establish limitations and exceptions to the exclusive rights of copyright holders – but only if they meet a set of related requirements known collectively as the “three-step test”. More information concerning the three-step test are available at: Finally, the TRIPS Agreement incorporates certain "flexibilities" with respect to member countries’ compliance with its requirements concerning copyright protection. These flexibilities aim to permit developing and least-developed countries to use TRIPS-compatible norms in a manner that enables them to pursue their own public policies, either in specific fields, such as access to pharmaceutical products, or more generally, in establishing the institutional framework that contributes to their economic development. More information concerning the flexibilities is available at: ... For the full text of the Agreement, see http://www.wto.org/english/tratop_e/trips_e/t_agm0_e.html. For a more elaborate examination of its provisions, you should visit:
- The Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement proposal (ACTA)
These six multilateral treaties may soon be joined by a seventh. In October 2007, the United States, the European Community, Switzerland, and Japan simultaneously announced that they would negotiate a new intellectual property enforcement treaty, the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, or ACTA. Australia, the Republic of Korea, New Zealand and Mexico have since joined the negotiations. Among other issues, the ACTA will deal with tools targeting "Internet distribution and information technology," such as authorizing officials to search for illegally downloaded music on personal devices at airports, or forcing Internet Service Providers to provide information about possible copyright infringers without a warrant. More information on ACTA is available at:
- Free trade agreements and Bilateral Investment Treaties
Multilateral agreements, such as the TRIPs Agreement, can provide effective protection to copyright holders worldwide, because they establish minimum substantive standards binding on large numbers of countries. However, they do not eliminate the need for bilateral treaties – either to address specific issues in which only two countries have an interest, or to enable interests groups within a powerful country to extract concessions from a weaker one. Such agreements are commonly known as free trade agreements (FTAs) or Bilateral Investment Treaties (BITs). Typically, such bilateral agreements either narrow the flexibilities that a developing country would enjoy under the TRIPS Agreement, or impose more stringent standards for copyright protection. For example, the US government has included anti-circumvention obligations in its bilateral FTAs with Jordan, Singapore, Chile, Morocco, Bahrain and Oman. Further information on FTAs are available at:
- Perspectives for developing countries
Upgrading copyright legislation and enforcement worldwide can be viewed as the duty of governments towards their citizens, as copyright protection promotes the arts and rewards authors for their creative efforts. Granting an exclusive right in creative expression will provide a necessary incentive to invest in the creation and distribution of expressive works and, thus, stimulates cultural advancement. On the other hand, it has been argued that instituting the same rules for copyright protection in all countries, regardless of their development status, can be detrimental for the cultural development of developing countries. As a rule, developed counties have powerful entertainment, education, and research industries, whereas developing countries import embodiments of the copyrighted works generated by those industries. Thus, developing countries have to pay more royalties and fees as a result of extended copyright protection. In addition, it has been argued that strict IP rules can restrict the ability of many governments to fulfil their human rights obligations, such as ensuring that their residents have fair access to educational goods. The latter set of arguments have prompted a growing number of developing countries to resist the imposition of the minimum standards of copyright protection set by the TRIPs agreement and the even harsher duties that are imposed on developing countries by FTAs. They call for a better balance between, on one hand, providing incentives to creators and rewarding their creative activities and, on the other hand, promoting access to knowledge and research, in order to spur economic growth and foster innovation in the developing countries.
- WIPO Development Agenda
In 2004, Brazil and Argentina submitted to the WIPO General Assembly a proposal for a “development agenda.” In general, the proposal sought to ensure that WIPO in its various activities pay greater attention to the impact of intellectual property protection on economic and social development, the need to safeguard public interest flexibilities, and the importance of promoting “development oriented” technical cooperation and assistance. The text of Brazil’s and Argentina’s proposal is available at: http://www.wipo.int/documents/en/document/govbody/wo_gb_ga/pdf/wo_ga_31_11.pdf. Additional proposals in support of a WIPO Development Agenda were submitted by other member states and organizations, such as Chile, the Group of Friends of Development, the Africa Group, and Colombia.
This initiative has made considerable progress. In the 2004 WIPO General Assembly, states agreed to hold a series of intergovernmental meetings to examine the proposals for a development agenda. Substantive reform proposals to establish a Development Agenda for WIPO passed during the 2007 General Assembly. The 45 development recommendations currently on the development agenda are available at: http://www.wipo.int/ip-development/en/agenda/recommendations.html
Organizations representing librarians have had a significant voice in the negotiations of the Development Agenda. Proposals of the International Federation of Library Associations (IFLA), the Library Copyright Alliance (LCA), and Electronic Information for Libraries (eIFL) are available at:...
More information on the WIPO development agenda are available at:
- The access to knowledge treaty proposal
The Argentina-Brazil proposal for a development agenda gave rise to a debate concerning whether WIPO should ensure effective technology transfer from developed to developing countries. Nongovernmental organisation (NGOs), academics, and researchers shared the concerns expressed by developing countries that some aspects of the copyright system were actually impeding innovation instead of promoting it and were creating disadvantages for the developing countries. This reaction to WIPO’s current policies took the form of a movement calling for equality among citizens from developed and developing countries as regards access to knowledge; it has come to be known as the “access to knowledge” or “A2K” movement. Librarians’ organizations, such as EIFL, were pioneers in the advocacy of people’s “right to knowledge” and have called upon WIPO to establish minimum exceptions and limitations to copyright protection. One outgrowth of the movement has been a proposal for United Nations treaty, the current draft of which is available at: http://www.cptech.org/a2k/a2k_treaty_may9.pdf. The treaty proposal aims to “protect and enhance access to knowledge, and to facilitate the transfer of technology to developing countries.” It includes a list of occasions when copyright holders should not be able to invoke their exclusive rights, such as: · The use of works for purposes of library or archival preservation, or to migrate content to a new format. · The efforts of libraries, archivists, or educational institutions to make copies of works that are protected by copyright but that are not currently the subject of commercial exploitation, for purposes of preservation, education, or research. · The use of excerpts, selections, and quotations for purposes of explanation and illustration in connection with not-for-profit teaching and scholarship. · The use of works, by educational institutions, as primary instructional materials, if those materials are not made readily available by right-holders at a reasonable price.
In addition, the proposal advocates a First Sale Doctrine for Library Use, stating that “a work that has been lawfully acquired by a library may be lent to others without further transaction fees to be paid by the library.” Finally, the A2K treaty proposal introduces provisions in support of distance education and other provisions accommodating the rights of persons with disabilities.
Librarians aren’t the only ones who could benefit from the A2K treaty. The proposal includes rules protecting Internet Service Providers from copyright liability, and also mitigates the strict circumvention prohibitions that are applied by the international treaties. Nonoriginal and orphan works would be left in the public domain under the treaty proposal, and people would be afforded access to publicly funded research works, government works, and archives of public broadcasting. Finally, the A2K treaty proposal also includes provisions on patent protection, anticompetitive practices, and transfer of technology to developing countries.
More information on the A2K Treaty proposal is available at:
- Back to the case study
Nadia knows that Mexico is a member of the Berne Convention, WIPO, Rome Convention, WCT and WPPT. After checking the online databases provided in the WIPO website she found out the following about the countries she is interested in working in;
- Ethiopia isn’t currently member to any of the international treaties on copyright protection. Thus, the national government of that country has the freedom to regulate copyright independently from other states in the rest of the world. Therefore Nadia cannot have an understanding of the copyright legislation in Ethiopia, unless she had studied Ethiopian copyright law. - Russia has signed the Berne Convention as well as the Rome Convention, but isn’t a member of the WTO. Both the Berne and the Rome Convention lack an effective enforcement mechanism though, which means that even if Russia hasn’t fully incorporated these international treaties, there are limited options enabling the signatory states to force Russia into complying with its obligations. Furthermore, Rome Convention grants states that access to the treaty the liberty to make reservations with regard to the application of certain provisions. Moreover, Russia has signed the WCT but the treaty hasn’t entered into force yet; in other words, although Russia has undertaken the obligation towards the other signatory countries to implement the treaty, it hasn’t been incorporated into Russian law yet and its content is not binding on Russian citizens. Russia isn’t a member of the WPPT. - India is a member state of the Berne and the Rome Conventions and is also a member of the WTO. All members of the WTO are members to the TRIPS, which also imposes on countries the obligation to enforce copyright adequately in their own territories, while the WTO dispute settlement mechanism ensures that all countries abide by their obligations. The TRIPs agreement requires WTO members to comply with the substantive provisions of the Berne Convention, with the exception of the recognition of moral rights. Therefore, Nadia can rely on the fact that the substantive requirements for copyright protection in Mexico and India are similar, to the extent provided in the TRIPS agreement. On the other hand India hasn’t signed the WCT and the WPPT. Thus Nadia cannot know how India regulates copyright protection of computer programs and databases and intellectual property rights of performers and of producers of phonograms. - Finally Belgium is a member to all the aforementioned international treaties on copyright protection. As a result, Nadia can only apply for the exchange program in Belgium, as she knows the basic framework on copyright protection in Belgium, based on her knowledge of Mexican copyright protection law.
Assignment and discussion questions
- Round 1 questions
1. Which international treaties in the field of intellectual property law has signed and ratified your country? Feel free to use the links and maps provided in this module to help you.
2. If your country were a member of the Berne Convention, could your national legislator issue a law according to which copyrighted works would be protected for a) 120 years b) 25 years? Why?
3. Imagine that your country is a member of the Berne Convention, but not of the WTO. 3a. Could your country’s legislator decide that authors of third countries should first register their works in a national archive in order for the works to be protected in your country? 3b. Could members states to the Berne Convention react to this requirement to protect the rights of their authors? 3c. Could they react if your country was a member of the WTO?
4. Imagine that your country, as well as Atlantis, are members to the Rome Convention. Could your legislator permit that music teachers in your country use freely in their classes recorded performances of singers from Atlantis? Could Atlantis demand from your country to oblige the music teachers to pay royalties to the Atlantian singers?
5. Atlantis has just signed and ratified the WIPO Copyright Treaty and now the national legislator wants to issue a law that will implement the treaty. Atlantis had never provided copyright protection to computer programs in the past and, as it is a country that only imports computer software from third countries, the national legislator believes that it is the in the interest of the Atlantians to provide as little protection to computer programs as possible. Skim the WCT and find the provision that would enable the national legislator to allow Atlantians, under certain circumstances, to freely use computer programs.
6. List the advantages and the disadvantages of enhanced copyright protection for creative works.
7. Do you think that both developed and developing countries should have the same rules for copyright protection? Why or why not?
8. Read article 3-1 of the draft text of the A2K treaty: http://www.cptech.org/a2k/a2k_treaty_may9.pdf Comment on the importance of one or two provisions for the missions you perform as a librarian.
- Round 2 questions
Please read comments on A2K treaty proposals that your colleagues provided to Round 1 question 2, and comment on one (or more) of them. You may give more examples based on situations you faced at work, or projects you could develop.