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    1. Enough is Enough: UC Leadership and the Transformation of Scholarly Publishing - Scholarly Communica

      Libraries have a growing list of trusted partners working to advance open access, including the Open Library of the Humanities , Public (...)

    2. Who pays for copyright enforcement? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      There are, of course, exceptions (for example, publicly funded district attorneys are responsible for prosecuting crimes like robbery or (...)

    3. What fair use is for - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      There are no lofty assertions about public benefits and the purpose of fair use ( I will make those assertions on their behalf). 

    4. Research Madness: All This Month!

      Beginning with a general overview of course selection for rising 2Ls on March 16, subsequent entries will discuss “Litigation Focus” (...)

    5. Copyright roundup 2 - Orphan Works - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      Certainly Congress has shown very little interest in adopting an orphan works “solution,” and as more and more courts recognize that (...)

    6. From Personal to Political - Duke University Libraries Magazine

      Histories, private and public, embodied in the lives of individuals such as Marshall Meyer or by organizations such as the Center for (...)

    7. A nightmare scenario for higher education - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      We’ll be watching your blog, and this trial with understandable interest. Mankel says: May 19, 2011 at 6:07 pm I hope they win.

    8. A glimpse into our future? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      If we are to avoid a similar situation, in which professors are forced to adopt a more cramped and costly pedagogy, we need our courts to (...)

    9. What problem can open access solve? - Scholarly Communications @ Duke

      The ironic result, of course, is that many schools with no interest in this title will be forced to subscribe to it while those (...)

    10. The Goodson Blogson

      SCOTUS-lovers might also enjoy National Public Radio’s Warhol-esque tribute to its Legal Affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg – the (...)

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