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ER&L 2012

April 1–4, 2012

Austin, Texas

2012 ER&L Program Search Tool


ER&L 2012 | April 2–4, 2012 | Austin, Texas and Online

Exploring ideas, trends and technologies in eresources and digital services.

Go to www.electroniclibrarian.org to view and print a 3 page pdf of all sessions by thread with conference hashtags.

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Tuesday Keynote: New ARL Best Practices in Fair Use

Tuesday, April 3, 2012 at 8:30 AM–9:30 AM CDT
Salon C
hashtag

#fairuse #erl12

Abstract

What is fair use, and how can libraries use their fair use rights to better accomplish their missions, from preservation to support for scholarship and teaching to digitizing collections for public access? A trail-breaking new document, the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Academic and Research Libraries, provides powerful new insights into the ways librarians can apply fair use principles to resolve central and recurring copyright challenges.  Brandon Butler of the Association of Research Libraries, and Peter Jaszi of American University Law School, co-facilitators of the code, will introduce this new document at this event.  They will provide an overview of its contents and discuss how librarians and library staff can use its principles in solving local challenges and improving local policies dealing with copyright and fair use.

Funded by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and based on two years of research into the core challenges that libraries face and the considered opinions of librarians from across the country on how best to solve them using fair use, this new code gives librarians tools to help reason through challenging copyright issues.

About these Speakers:

Brandon Butler is the director of public policy initiatives at the Association of Research Libraries (ARL), a group of 126 major academic and research libraries in North America. His responsibilities include analysis and advocacy regarding copyright, privacy and surveillance, free expression, and telecommunications. He also writes the ARL Policy Notes blog at <http://policynotes.arl.org> and the @ARLpolicy twitter feed. He earned bachelor’s degrees in English and philosophy from the University of Georgia, a master’s in philosophy from the University of Texas at Austin, and his law degree from the University of Virginia School of Law. Before working at ARL, he was an associate in the media and information technologies practice at the law firm Dow Lohnes PLLC in Washington, DC.

Peter Jaszi teaches domestic and international copyright law, directs the Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual Property Law Clinic, and writes about copyright history and theory. With Craig Joyce, Marshall Leaffer, and Tyler Ochoa, he co-authored the standard copyright textbook Copyright Law (Lexis, eighth edition, 2010). In 1994 he was a member of the Librarian of Congress’s Advisory Commission on Copyright Registration and Deposit, and in 1995 he was an organizer of the Digital Future Coalition.  He is a trustee of the Copyright Society of the USA and a member of the editorial board of its journal.  Since 2005 he has been working with Professor Patricia Aufderheide of the American University’s Center for Social Media on projects designed to promote the understanding of fair use by creators, scholars and others (see <http://www.wcl.american.edu/pijip/go/fair-use>); their book, Reclaiming Fair Use, was published in 2011. In 2007 he received the American Library Association’s L. Ray Patterson Copyright Award, and in 2009 the Intellectual Property Section of the District of Columbia Bar honored him as that year’s Champion of Intellectual Property. He also received a 2011 IP3 award from Public Knowledge.

Presenters

Brandon Butler, Association of Research Libraries
Peter Jaszi, American University Law School
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