This conference - Copyright Future: Copyright Freedom – will be held at Old Parliament House (OPH) in Canberra on Wednesday 27th May and Thursday 28th May 2009. The month of May in 2009 marks 40 years since the commencement of the Australian Copyright Act of 1968.
Program Chairs: Professor Brian Fitzgerald and Benedict Atkinson
QUT Law Faculty and ARC Centre of Excellence for Creative Industries and Innovation
The conference will consider the history of copyright law with special focus on the excellent work of Benedict Atkinson on the True History of Australian Copyright Law (2007). It will also chart the path of copyright law since that time and give special focus to future possibilities.
The conference will be opened by the Honourable Robert McClelland Attorney-General for the Commonwealth of Australia and our Keynote Speaker will be Professor Lawrence Lessig of Stanford University Law School.
Speakers include:
- Professor Julie Cohen, Faculty of Law Georgetown University Washington DC
- Professor Tom Cochrane DVC QUT
- Maroochy Barambah, Songwoman for Turrbal People
- Professor Adrian Sterling, Queen Mary College London
- Dr Terry Cutler, Cutler and Co Melbourne
- Professor Susy Frankel, Faculty of Law Victoria University of Wellington NZ
- Professor Anne Fitzgerald, Faculty of Law QUT
- Dr Prodromous Tsiavos, London School of Economics London
- Professor Phillip Graham, Director of iCi QUT
For further information on this conference please contact Professor Brian Fitzgerald
at QUT via email: bf.fitzgerald@qut.edu.au
Part of the conference will be held in the House of Representatives Chamber in Old Parliament House. As we are restricted as to the number of people that can be present in the House of Representatives Chamber the conference audience will be limited to 100 people.
1 comment:
Hello,
I noticed that you have a web site that relates to copyrights. Please consider posting a link to http://www.CopyrightSearch.org on your web site. CopyrightSearch.org hosts a growing database of registered copyright records that researchers and librarians can use to perform research.
Thank you.
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