Extended Collective Licenses and the Nordic Experience - It’s a Hybrid but is It a Volvo or a Lemon
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Extended Collective Licenses and the Nordic Experience - It’s a Hybrid but is It a Volvo or a Lemon. / Schovsbo, Jens Hemmingsen; Riis, Thomas.
I: Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts, Bind 33, Nr. 4, 2010, s. 471-498.Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskrift › Tidsskriftartikel › Forskning
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Extended Collective Licenses and the Nordic Experience - It’s a Hybrid but is It a Volvo or a Lemon
AU - Schovsbo, Jens Hemmingsen
AU - Riis, Thomas
N1 - Dette er er revideret version af det paper, som tidligere er blevert publiceret på SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1535230
PY - 2010
Y1 - 2010
N2 - An extended collective license is a legal model whereby the binding effect of a collective agreement between an organization of copyright holders and a user of copyrightable works is extended to right holders who are not members of the organization. Such models have been used for rights clearance in the Nordic countries since the early 1960s. Extended collective licenses are praised by the Nordic countries and met with positive interest around the world as the primary means to solve most of the copyright complications in the information society. This article evaluates extended collective licenses and their compatibility with international copyright norms and the perspective of transplanting the model into other jurisdictions.
AB - An extended collective license is a legal model whereby the binding effect of a collective agreement between an organization of copyright holders and a user of copyrightable works is extended to right holders who are not members of the organization. Such models have been used for rights clearance in the Nordic countries since the early 1960s. Extended collective licenses are praised by the Nordic countries and met with positive interest around the world as the primary means to solve most of the copyright complications in the information society. This article evaluates extended collective licenses and their compatibility with international copyright norms and the perspective of transplanting the model into other jurisdictions.
M3 - Journal article
VL - 33
SP - 471
EP - 498
JO - Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts
JF - Columbia Journal of Law and the Arts
IS - 4
ER -
ID: 32125575