The human impulse for attribution symbolizes the linkage between an author and her creative work. In many countries, authors are afforded a right of attribution as part of a broader doctrine known as moral rights. The United States, however, does not adequately protect moral rights. This Article focuses exclusively on the right of attribution as one component of the moral rights doctrine. Initially, it examines the connection between copyright law and the right of attribution and establishes the inadequacy of the current copyright law as a means of safeguarding the right of attribution. Next, it addresses why section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, which frequently has been hailed as a viable substitute for the right of attribution, is an inadequa...
This piece looks at the basis of copyrights and moral rights in relation to academic research. Some ...
This article maps the problematic consequences of over reliance by judges, lawyers and policy makers...
Despite considerable research suggesting that creators value attribution – i.e., being named as the ...
The human impulse for attribution symbolizes the linkage between an author and her creative work. In...
This article identifies three basic frameworks that intellectual property theorists have used to sup...
The U.S. Constitution authorizes Congress to secure for limited times the exclusive right of authors...
The US Supreme Court in its 2003 decision in Dastar v. Twentieth Century Fox, construing the Lanham ...
In the Visual Artists Rights Act, Congress has for the first time included moral rights within the U...
Over ten years ago in the Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal, I inquired whether authors’ “m...
In contemporary debates over copyright, the figure of the author is too-often absent. As a result, t...
This Article will demonstrate that copyright owners alleging infringement of the derivative works ri...
Moral rights protection exists to recognize authorship autonomy by safeguarding the author\u27s mean...
Authorship and creativity are products of authentic human expression that the law must encourage in ...
In honor of the 50th Anniversary of the American Intellectual Property Law Association Quarterly Jou...
This piece looks at the basis of copyrights and moral rights in relation to academic research. Some ...
This article maps the problematic consequences of over reliance by judges, lawyers and policy makers...
Despite considerable research suggesting that creators value attribution – i.e., being named as the ...
The human impulse for attribution symbolizes the linkage between an author and her creative work. In...
This article identifies three basic frameworks that intellectual property theorists have used to sup...
The U.S. Constitution authorizes Congress to secure for limited times the exclusive right of authors...
The US Supreme Court in its 2003 decision in Dastar v. Twentieth Century Fox, construing the Lanham ...
In the Visual Artists Rights Act, Congress has for the first time included moral rights within the U...
Over ten years ago in the Cardozo Arts and Entertainment Law Journal, I inquired whether authors’ “m...
In contemporary debates over copyright, the figure of the author is too-often absent. As a result, t...
This Article will demonstrate that copyright owners alleging infringement of the derivative works ri...
Moral rights protection exists to recognize authorship autonomy by safeguarding the author\u27s mean...
Authorship and creativity are products of authentic human expression that the law must encourage in ...
In honor of the 50th Anniversary of the American Intellectual Property Law Association Quarterly Jou...
This piece looks at the basis of copyrights and moral rights in relation to academic research. Some ...
This article maps the problematic consequences of over reliance by judges, lawyers and policy makers...
Despite considerable research suggesting that creators value attribution – i.e., being named as the ...