International Protection of Performers Rights
By (Author) Owen Morgan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
10th October 2002
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Other performing arts
Intellectual property law
International law
341.758
Hardback
296
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 23mm
With the development of technology such as films, sound recordings and the Internet, performers have lost control over the exploitation of their performances. The perceived need to protect performers on an international basis - that is, in states in which they are foreigners - has led to provisions being included in three international instruments (the Rome Convention (1961), TRIPS (1994), and the WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty (1996)) that together form an international system of performers' rights. This text provides a comparative analysis of the protection afforded to performers in the international instruments. Although the focus is on establishing whether the international instruments provide an appropriate system of protection, attention is given to the key underlying issues: from whom or from what do performers need protection; can protection for performers be justified; and what is a performance Where appropriate, examples of domestic legislation and cases are drawn from the UK and other common law jurisdictions.
This book is an enjoyable and interesting analysis of the justification and international treatment of performers rights. It will be valuable to practitioners and academics seeking to understand the past, present and possible future developments in this area of law. Morgans well thought out structure guides the reader through a number of different and potentially difficult concepts as they relate to the rights of performers. -- Catherine Lee, Copyright Reporter
Owen Morgan teaches commercial law at the University of Auckland where he specializes in intellectual property issues.