Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses

Publikation: Working paperForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses. / Schovsbo, Jens Hemmingsen; Riis, Thomas; Rognstad, Ole-Andreas.

2016.

Publikation: Working paperForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Schovsbo, JH, Riis, T & Rognstad, O-A 2016 'Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses'. <http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1535230>

APA

Schovsbo, J. H., Riis, T., & Rognstad, O-A. (2016). Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses. http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1535230

Vancouver

Schovsbo JH, Riis T, Rognstad O-A. Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses. 2016.

Author

Schovsbo, Jens Hemmingsen ; Riis, Thomas ; Rognstad, Ole-Andreas. / Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses. 2016.

Bibtex

@techreport{d79ccae2464348d8ada41c7d1c9cf8fb,
title = "Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses",
abstract = "This contribution analyses and discusses the use of collective management organizations (CMOs) in copyright. More concretely, it examines the use and effects of extended collective licenses (ECL). This model of rights management has been developed in the Nordic countries and has for some time been hailed as a promising tool to solve some of copyright{\textquoteright}s problems relating to mass uses of works. It is pointed out how ECL builds on users generated rights managements structures (CMOs) but owes its specific effectiveness to a legislator{\textquoteright}s willingness to provide a third-party effect of the collective agreements entered into by representative CMOs. In the final part some of the challenges to ECLs arising from internationalisation and individualisation are identified and discussed. The article is part of a research project on “User Generated Law” and uses the methodologies developed as part of this.",
author = "Schovsbo, {Jens Hemmingsen} and Thomas Riis and Ole-Andreas Rognstad",
note = "Optaget til offentligg{\o}relse i T Riis (red.) User Generated Law. Reconstructing Intellectual Property Law in a Knowledge Society, Edward Elgar 2016 (kommende). Lagt p{\aa} http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1535230",
year = "2016",
language = "English",
type = "WorkingPaper",

}

RIS

TY - UNPB

T1 - Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses

AU - Schovsbo, Jens Hemmingsen

AU - Riis, Thomas

AU - Rognstad, Ole-Andreas

N1 - Optaget til offentliggørelse i T Riis (red.) User Generated Law. Reconstructing Intellectual Property Law in a Knowledge Society, Edward Elgar 2016 (kommende). Lagt på http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1535230

PY - 2016

Y1 - 2016

N2 - This contribution analyses and discusses the use of collective management organizations (CMOs) in copyright. More concretely, it examines the use and effects of extended collective licenses (ECL). This model of rights management has been developed in the Nordic countries and has for some time been hailed as a promising tool to solve some of copyright’s problems relating to mass uses of works. It is pointed out how ECL builds on users generated rights managements structures (CMOs) but owes its specific effectiveness to a legislator’s willingness to provide a third-party effect of the collective agreements entered into by representative CMOs. In the final part some of the challenges to ECLs arising from internationalisation and individualisation are identified and discussed. The article is part of a research project on “User Generated Law” and uses the methodologies developed as part of this.

AB - This contribution analyses and discusses the use of collective management organizations (CMOs) in copyright. More concretely, it examines the use and effects of extended collective licenses (ECL). This model of rights management has been developed in the Nordic countries and has for some time been hailed as a promising tool to solve some of copyright’s problems relating to mass uses of works. It is pointed out how ECL builds on users generated rights managements structures (CMOs) but owes its specific effectiveness to a legislator’s willingness to provide a third-party effect of the collective agreements entered into by representative CMOs. In the final part some of the challenges to ECLs arising from internationalisation and individualisation are identified and discussed. The article is part of a research project on “User Generated Law” and uses the methodologies developed as part of this.

M3 - Working paper

BT - Collective Agreements for the Clearance of Copyrights – The Case of Collective Management and Extended Collective Licenses

ER -

ID: 164345258