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ItemCopyright and cultural institutions: Guidelines for digitization for U.S. libraries, archives, and museumsHirtle, P ; HUDSON, EJ ; KENYON, A (Cornell University Library, 2009)The development of new digital technologies has led to fundamental changes in the ways that cultural institutions fulfill their public missions of access, preservation, research, and education. Many institutions are developing publicly accessible Web sites that allow users to visit online exhibitions, search collection databases, access images of collection items, and in some cases create their own digital content. Digitization, however, also raises the possibility of copyright infringement. It is imperative that staff in libraries, archives, and museums understand fundamental copyright principles and how institutional procedures can be affected by the law. “Copyright and Cultural Institutions” was written to assist understanding and compliance with copyright law. It addresses the basics of copyright law and the exclusive rights of the copyright owner, the major exemptions used by cultural heritage institutions, and stresses the importance of “risk assessment” when conducting any digitization project. Case studies on digitizing oral histories and student work are also included.
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ItemNo Preview AvailableBlurring the Lines: Market-Driven and Democracy-Driven Freedom of ExpressionEdstrom, M ; Kenyon, A ; Svensson, E ; Edstrom, M ; Kenyon, AT ; Svensson, E-M (Nordicom, 2016)This book focuses on challenges from the market to free speech and how free speech can be protected, promoted and developed when lines between journalism and advertising are blurred. With contributions from 20 scholars in law, media studies and philosophy, it explores an issue deserving greater attention, market pressures on freedom of expression. The role of commercial constraints on speech, restrictions and control of media content and the responsibility of state institutions in protecting free speech are some of the topics scrutinized from a democratic free speech perspective.
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ItemNo Preview AvailablePrinciples of Contract LawPATERSON, J ; ROBERTSON, AJ ; HEFFEY, P (Lawbook Co, 2005)
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ItemThe Politics of Law and Stability in ChinaTrevaskes, S ; Nesossi, E ; Sapio, F ; Biddulph, S ; Trevaskes, S ; Nesossi, E ; Sapio, F ; Biddulph, S (Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, 2014)
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ItemLegal Reforms and Deprivation of Liberty in Contemporary ChinaNesossi, E ; Biddulph, S ; Sapio, F ; Trevaskes, S ; Nesossi, E ; Biddulph, S ; Sapio, F ; Trevaskes, S (Routledge, 2016)The power to deprive people of their liberty is a defining prerogative of the state and the dominant form of punishment in most societies across the world.
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ItemThe Stability Imperative Human Rights and Law in ChinaBiddulph, S (UBC Press, 2015)social stability has been a core priority of the CCP. After installation of the new generation of leaders under under General Secretary Xi Jinping in 2012 there has been no lessening of the focus by senior leadership on the preservation of ...
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ItemExtending Working Life for Older Workers: Age Discrimination Law, Policy and PracticeBlackham, A (Hart Publishing, 2016)Drawing on qualitative expert interviews, statistical analysis and organisational case studies, this book illustrates the failure of age discrimination laws to achieve attitudinal change in the UK, and reveals the limited prevalence of ...
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ItemAcoustic Jurisprudence Listening to the Trial of Simon BikindiParker, JEK (Oxford University Press, USA, 2015-09-01)All the while, judges, barristers, and witnesses alike spoke into microphones and listened through headphones. As a result, the Bikindi case offers an ideal opportunity to explore what this book calls the 'judicial soundscape'.
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ItemTribal Constitutionalism: States, Tribes, and the Governance of MembershipGover, K (Oxford University Press, 2011-01-01)
In settler societies, tribal self-governance creates a legal distinction between indigeneity (defined by settler governments) and tribal membership (defined by tribes). Many legally indigenous persons are not tribal members, and some tribal members are not legally indigenous. This book considers the membership rules included in the constitutions and membership codes of nearly 750 recognized tribes in Canada, New Zealand, Australia, and the United States. It addresses the first-order question of tribal constitutionalism: who are the members of tribes, and how are they chosen? The question is of practical and theoretical import. A large proportion of indigenous peoples in each state are not enrolled in a recognized tribe, and the majority of indigenous peoples do not live near their tribal territories. The book's empirical study challenges many of the assumptions used to model tribalism in theories of cultural pluralism, especially those that depict tribes as distinctively insular, ascriptive, and territorially-confined. The book shows that while they are descent-based groups, tribes also self-constitute relationally, by enrolling non-descendants in accordance with cultural and social criteria, and by recruiting from other indigenous communities. The book draws on tribal law and practice, political theory, legal doctrine, policy, and demographic data to critically assess the strategies used by tribes and states to manage the jurisdictional and ideological challenges of tribal membership governance.
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ItemAustralian family law: The contemporary contextFEHLBERG, B ; Behrens, J (Oxford University Press, 2008)