LAW Intellectual Property: International and Comparative Copyright
Intellectual Property: Copyright Law

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Intellectual Property
Copyright Law

Business Law: Antitrust & Trade Regulation
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Business Law: Commercial Transactions & Licensing
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Business Law: Media, Entertainment, Sports
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Intellectual Property: Computer Software
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Intellectual Property: Cyberlaw & the Internet
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Intellectual Property: Media, Entertainment, Sports
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Item is good for 48 routes, rollover orange dots above to see which ones! LAW 745 Intellectual Property: International and Comparative Copyright Law School Recommended for route(s): [ Academia ] [ Litigation ] [ Regulatory & Policy ] [ Transactional ] Intellectual Property: Copyright Law Why it is relevant for ... [ Academia ] [ Litigation ] [ Regulatory & Policy ] [ Transactional ] as a Key Elective : This course is important for those who expect to handle copyright issues, particularly those who will serve clients in the media, sports and entertainment industry. You will need to understand the rights and remedies that attach to creative works in both the U.S. and in jurisdictions outside the U.S. Equally significant, you need to understand the principles of choice of law that govern which jurisdiction will control the specific rights and remedies available to your client in the event of a dispute. General course Description: Music, motion pictures, books and computer programs are protected instantly upon their creation and without further ado under the copyright laws of 159+ countries. One great challenge for lawyers is to determine who owns the rights to these works across countries with differing legal systems. Another challenge is to determine what rights and remedies attach to these works, and what exceptions to rights apply, across countries that assign different policy weights to the interests of creators and users. Few copyright licenses today fail to reach across borders, and copyright litigation increasingly calls for an understanding of foreign law. This course will focus on the counselling considerations that surround the exploitation of foreign and domestic copyrighted works, respectively, in domestic and foreign markets through licensing, litigation, or both. The course will survey the principal legal systems and international treaty arrangements for the protection of copyrighted works as well as questions of jurisdiction, territoriality, national treatment, and choice of law. There will be no exam in the course, but rather four problem sets that will be discussed in separate class sessions. Students may select which three of the problem sets they wish to have graded. Elements used in grading: In-class problem sets. Course Style: |