Search results for: “established right”

  • Civil Rights And Civil Liberties Early Development

    Civil Rights and Civil Liberties History Early DevelopmentIndividual freedom can survive only under a system of law by which both the sovereign and the governed are bound. Such a system of fundamental laws, whether written or embodied in tradition, is known as a constitution. The idea of go…

  • Rightholder

    Rightholders are all of those persons who may have rights in any given work and therefore have the requisite rights necessary to licence the work for a certain use. Whether this person is the author, the publisher or other depends upon the circumstances of the contractual agreements/the applicable l…

  • International human rights law Part 46

    International human rights law Part 46   587 ANALYZING WOMEN’S USE OF THE INTERNET THROUGH THE RIGHTS DEBATE Reem Bandi Chicago-Kent Law Review Volume 75, Number 3, 2000 p.869 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW Women’s use of the Internet has received very little attention from feminist legal commentators. While they increasingly turn to it as…

  • International human rights law Part 41

    International human rights law Part 41   530 U.S. COURTS, THE DEATH PENALTY, AND THE DOCTRINE OF SPECIALTY: ENFORCEMENT IN THE HEART OF DARKNESS Speedy Rice & Renée Luke Santa Clara Law Review Volume 42, Number 4, 2002 p.1061 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW Since 1976, state governments in the United States have executed at…

  • International human rights law Part 41

    International human rights law Part 41   530 U.S. COURTS, THE DEATH PENALTY, AND THE DOCTRINE OF SPECIALTY: ENFORCEMENT IN THE HEART OF DARKNESS Speedy Rice & Renée Luke Santa Clara Law Review Volume 42, Number 4, 2002 p.1061 LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW Since 1976, state governments in the United States have executed at…

  • The Right to Privacy 8

    The Right to Privacy   The same reasons exist for distinguishing between oral and written publications of private matters, as is afforded in the law of defamation by the restricted liability for slander as compared with the liability for libel.[47] The injury resulting from such oral communications would ordinarily be so trifling that the law…

  • The Right to Privacy 6

    The Right to Privacy   Thus, in Abernethy v. Hutchinson, 3 L. J. Ch. 209 (1825), where the plaintiff, a distinguished surgeon, sought to restrain the publication in the Lancet of unpublished lectures which he had delivered at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital in London, Lord Eldon doubted whether there could be property in lectures which had…

  • Convention (V) Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land

    Convention (V) Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land   CHAPTER I The Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers Article 1. The territory of neutral Powers is inviolable. Art. 2. Belligerents are forbidden to move troops or convoys of either munitions of war or supplies across…

  • Convention (V) Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land

    Convention (V) Respecting the Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers and Persons in Case of War on Land   CHAPTER I The Rights and Duties of Neutral Powers Article 1. The territory of neutral Powers is inviolable. Art. 2. Belligerents are forbidden to move troops or convoys of either munitions of war or supplies across…

  • Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris 6

    Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris   Article XVII. 1. This Convention shall not in any way affect the provisions of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works or membership in the Union created by that Convention. 2. In application of the foregoing paragraph, a declaration has been annexed to…

  • Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris 5

    Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris   Article VIII. 1. This Convention, which shall bear the date of 24 July 1971, shall be deposited with the Director-General and shall remain open for signature by all States party to the 1952 Convention for a period of 120 days after the date of this Convention. It…

  • Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris 4

    Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris   Article V quater. 1. Any Contracting State to which article V bis (1) applies may adopt the following provisions: (a) If, after the expiration of (i) the relevant period specified in sub-paragraph (c) commencing from the date of first publication of a particular edition of a literary,…

  • Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris 3

    Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris   Article V ter. 1. (a) Any Contracting State to which article V bis (1) applies may substitute for the period of seven years provided for in article V (2) a period of three years or any longer period prescribed by its legislation. However, in the case of…

  • Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris 2

    Universal Copyright Convention as revised at Paris   Article V. 1. The rights referred to in article I shall include the exclusive right of the author to make, publish and authorize the making and publication of translations of works protected under this Convention. 2. However, any Contracting State may, by its domestic legislation, restrict the…

  • World Intellectual Property Organization: Copyright Treaty

    World Intellectual Property Organization: Copyright Treaty   Article 1 Relation to the Berne Convention (1) This Treaty is a special agreement within the meaning of Article 20 of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works, as regards Contracting Parties that are countries of the Union established by that Convention. This Treaty…