Copyright Law Symposium


Book Description

Featured here are the following prizewinning essays in the 1992 and 1993 ASCAP Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition in copyright law: 19921st Prize: Daniel A. Saunders, University of California School of Law at Berkeley, "Copyright Law's Broken 'Rear Window': An Appraisal of Damage and Estimate Repair".2nd Prize: Laurie Stearns, University of California School of Law at Berkeley, "Copy Wrong: Plagiarism, Process, Property and the Law".3rd Prize: Julie Alane Arthur, Georgetown University Law Center, "Jeff Koons: Artist or Thief?"4th Prize: Philip H. Miller, Fordham University School of Law, "Life After Feist: Facts for the Amendment, and the Copyright Status of Automated Databases".5th Prize: Jeffrey H. Brown, University of Wisconsin Law School, "'They Don't Make Music the Way they Used To': The Legal Implications of 'Sampling' in Contemporary Music".19931st Prize: Raleigh William Newsam, II, X, "Architecture and Copyright: An Analytical Framework for Separating the Poeticfrom the Prosaic".2nd Prize: Timothy Scott Teter, Stanford Law School, "Merger and the Machines: An Analysis of the Pro-Compatibility Trend in Computer Science Copyright Cases".3rd Prize: Carl H. Settlemyer, Georgetown University Law Center, "Between Thought and Possession: Artists' 'Moral Rights' and Public Access to Creative Works".4th Prize: Carolyn McColley, University of California School of Law at Berkeley, "Limitations on Moral Rights in French: Droit d'Au




The Soul of Creativity


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This book explores human creativity to illustrate how the legal system can protect a wide variety of authors from attribution failures and other assaults to the intended messages of their works.




Moral Rights in Our Copyright Laws


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Rutgers Law Journal


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Comm/Ent


Book Description