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RIHA Resolution on Copyright
As agreed at the RIHA General Assembly, Rome, 8 November
2008
1. Statement
“Copyright seeks to protect the rights of authorship
while securing the dissemination of knowledge. It protects
the form of expression of ideas, but not the ideas,
information or concepts expressed (…) A regime which is
unduly protective of the interest of existing rights holders
may therefore inhibit, or even stifle, the development of
original material.”
British Academy, Copyright and Research in the Humanities
and Social Sciences, 2006
RIHA, the International Association of Research
Institutes in the History of Art, is concerned that recent
developments in technology, legislation and practice have
meant that the various copyright exemptions that exist to
promote the advance of creative and scholarly work are not
being applied to achieve their intended effect. RIHA
strongly believes that neither copyright nor licensing rules
should inhibit the development and diffusion of original
scholarly research, regardless of the way in which it is
published or otherwise disseminated.
RIHA calls upon copyright holders and other stakeholders
including publishers, galleries, museums, and collecting
societies, when dealing with scholarly research, to:
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Subscribe to the definition of scholarly research as
stated in section 2 of this document
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Apply the existing copyright exemptions in keeping with
their intended purpose
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Refrain from demanding or refusing unnecessary
permissions, or granting these permissions on unreasonable
terms.
RIHA further calls upon collecting societies and monopoly
copyright holders, when charging for the use and
reproduction of images in scholarly publications, to charge
solely the marginal cost to the institution of making the
specific reproduction for delivery to the researcher, rather
than the costs of creating and maintaining a collection of
images or of making provision for a profit margin on
transactions.
2. Definitions of research
For the purpose of clarity, RIHA proposes the following
definitions of research:*
Scholarly research
A type of non-commercial research whose principal
objective is public benefit rather than private profit
and/or the recovery of the costs of the research. Scholarly
research may include the initial stages of collecting
material as well as subsequent stages which involve the
analysis and publication of the results. The presentation of
the results will be without charge to the recipients or will
be at a charge which can only be expected to cover the
reasonable costs of production and distribution, including
the reasonable profits of a commercial publisher.
Commercial research
Research whose principal objective is profit rather than
public benefit. Commercial research normally includes a
charge to the user that covers the cost of the research as
well as its dissemination, and includes a profit margin.
3. Recommendations
RIHA urges copyright holders and other stakeholders to
respect of the following British Academy recommendations
(paraphrased):
Recommendation 1
Copyright must provide reasonably broad and practically
effective exemptions for research and private study, and for
criticism or review.
Recommendation 2
With regard to the exception for research and private
study under the 1988 Copyright Act:
a) ‘Research’ should be treated as distinct from ‘private
study’ and should not only encompass the intial stages of an
academic project but also subsequent analysis and
publication
b) Research should be treated as non-commercial where the
taking of copyright material is fair, and where any charge
to the user would only cover production and distribution of
a publication (including reasonable profit of a commercial
publisher)
c) Research funded by a research council or charity is by
definition non-commercial
d) In the case of commercial research, charges should be
reasonable and abuse should be restrained.
* The definitions of research are based on the findings
and recommendations of the British Academy report Copyright
and Research in the Humanities and Social Sciences (2006)
and the Guidelines on Copyright and Academic Research,
issued as a supplement to the report. RIHA also notes that
the Joint Guidelines on Copyright and Academic Research
(2008), published jointly by the British Academy and the
Publishers Association, offers valuable clarification of
some of the issues touched on in the 2006 report. All three
documents can be accessed and downloaded at <http://www.britac.ac.uk/reports/copyright>
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