Copyright and the Court of Justice of the European Union
Voted IPKAT Best Copyright Law Book 2019
(Sprache: Englisch)
Voted IPKAT Best Copyright Law Book 2019
This monograph focuses on the CJEU, and seeks to understand its role and action in the area of copyright, also outlining whether the latter has been informed by any particular vision of what EU copyright should be...
This monograph focuses on the CJEU, and seeks to understand its role and action in the area of copyright, also outlining whether the latter has been informed by any particular vision of what EU copyright should be...
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Voted IPKAT Best Copyright Law Book 2019
This monograph focuses on the CJEU, and seeks to understand its role and action in the area of copyright, also outlining whether the latter has been informed by any particular vision of what EU copyright should be like, and what the legacy of all this might be.
This monograph focuses on the CJEU, and seeks to understand its role and action in the area of copyright, also outlining whether the latter has been informed by any particular vision of what EU copyright should be like, and what the legacy of all this might be.
Klappentext zu „Copyright and the Court of Justice of the European Union “
This title focuses specifically on the role, action, and legacy of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) in the field of copyright, also by providing an exclusive survey that covers two decades (1998 - 2018) of CJEU decisions in this area of the law.The main objective of this work is providing readers with a sense of direction of EU copyright case law. In order to achieve this, an attempt of 'tidying up' and rationalizing existing rulings is carried out. The book consists of three parts. The first part explores the role of the CJEU in copyright cases. Besides outlining the history of EU copyright harmonization and providing statistical data concerning the Court's activity, it extracts the key standards employed in copyright case law, explains their meaning and significance, and carries out a novel statistical analysis aimed at mapping relations between the various standards. Following a discussion of the impact of CJEU interpretation of certain EU copyright provisions (notably their preemptive force on individual EU Member States' freedom), the second part is concerned with CJEU action (and vision) in respect of three key areas of copyright: the construction of economic rights; exceptions and limitations; and enforcement. The final part focuses on CJEU legacy broadly intended. It tackles two distinct perspectives, these being the effect on national copyright laws and the current policy discourse around EU copyright reform. As regards the former, the book discusses the default consequences of the departure of a certain Member State from the EU. In relation to the latter, attention is focused on a number of selected areas, which require to be considered in light, not just of existing legislation, but also - andperhaps most importantly - existing case law.
Inhaltsverzeichnis zu „Copyright and the Court of Justice of the European Union “
Acknowledgments; Advocate General Maciej Szpunar (Court of Justice of the European Union): Foreword; Table of abbreviations; Table of figures; Table of international and EU legislation; Table of case law; Introduction; Part I - EU harmonization and the functioning of the CJEU; 1 EU copyright harmonization and CJEU role and action; 2 Standards applied in relevant copyright rulings: a data-based case law analysis; Part II - Beyond the law? A CJEU-made copyright system; 3 Towards less flexibility: EU preemption; 4 The construction of economic rights in the InfoSoc Directive; 5 The construction of exceptions and limitations in the InfoSoc Directive; 6 Enforcement of copyright; Part III - The legacy of the CJEU; 7 Relevance of EU copyright law to (future) non-EU Member States; 8 CJEU case law and the interplay with policy and legislative action in the DSM; Conclusion - Copyright and the CJEU: role, action, legacy; References; Appendix 1: Directive 2001/29 (InfoSoc Directive); Appendix 2: Directive 2004/48 (Enforcement Directive); Index
Autoren-Porträt von Eleonora Rosati
An Italian-qualified lawyer (avvocato), Dr Eleonora Rosati is a tenured associate professor in intellectual property law at the University of Southampton (UK), an editor of the Journal of Intellectual Property Law & Practice (Oxford University Press), and an of counsel at Bird&Bird LLP. She has authored numerous contributions on intellectual property issues, and also contributes to specialist blogs The IPKat and The 1709 Blog, for which she has writtenseveral hundreds of posts over the past few years. Further information is available at www.elawnora.com.
Bibliographische Angaben
- Autor: Eleonora Rosati
- 2019, 352 Seiten, Maße: 23,8 cm, Gebunden, Englisch
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- ISBN-10: 0198837178
- ISBN-13: 9780198837176
- Erscheinungsdatum: 21.04.2019
Sprache:
Englisch
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