The conference took place on the 26th of June 2023, in the Business School South, Jubilee Campus, University of Nottingham. Séverine Dusollier: The insufficiency of fundamental rightsĬontact: Estelle Derclaye (scientific programme) Ioanna Lapatoura (administrative matters).1st Annual Advanced Pain Discovery (APDP) Conference Jonathan Griffiths: Fundamental Rights in the CJEU’s Copyright Jurisprudence in Reviewġ7.20-17.45 – Prof. Martin Senftleben: Safeguarding Human Freedom of Expression, Art Autonomy and Alternative Visions of Society in the Age of AI Systems Substituting Human Literary and Artistic Productionsġ7.00-17.20 – Prof. Marco Ricolfi: IP and de facto powers in an algorithmic environmentġ6.25-16.45 – Prof. Martin Kretschmer: Online regulation by proxy? An assessment of Codes of conduct and Codes of practiceĬopyright, competition aspects and fairness concernsġ6.05-16.25 – Prof. Martin Husovec: (Ir)Responsible Legislature? Speech Risks under the EU’s Rules on Delegated Digital Enforcementġ4.50-15.10 – Prof. Human rights and the role of intermediaries, the state and other parties in enforcing copyrightġ4.30-14.50 – Dr. Péter Mezei: The CDSMD and educational limitations and exceptions in Hungary – an empirical analysisġ2.30-13.30 – Lunch Venue: Atrium, Law and Social Sciences Buildingġ3.30-14.30 – Postgraduate studies and career session for students discussion with ECS members Bernd Justin Jütte: The emergence of the fundamental right to research and its implications for copyright lawġ1.55-12.15 – Prof. Tatiana Synodinou: Copyright versus freedom of expression (critique, satire and parody)ġ1.35-11.55 – Prof. Human rights and exceptions to copyright and related rightsġ1.15-11.35 – Prof. Ole-Andreas Rognstad: The fundamental rights status of countries associated to the EU: the EEA, the UK and SwitzerlandĬhair Session 2: Prof. Caterina Sganga: The past, present and future of Article 17(2) CFREUġ0.20-10.40 – Prof. Estelle Derclayeĩ.15-9.45 – Keynote speech – Lord Justice Arnold, Court of Appeal of England and Wales: The Constitutional Turn: Balancing Copyright and Freedom of Expression in English LawĬopyright as a human right in the EU and associated countriesġ0.00-10.20 – Dr. The conference closed with discussions on this point.įor the first time, we also included a session especially for students so that they could ask the members of the European Copyright Society questions about postgraduate studies, both masters and doctoral programmes, as well as career opportunities.ī63 Law and Social Sciences building, University Park Campus, University of Nottingham NG7 2RDĩ.00-9.15 – Welcome address and introductionĬhair Keynote Speech: Prof. That said, while human rights generally provide good checks and balances for copyright potential excesses, they may not be the only solution. The conference touched upon all these topics. Beyond human rights, more general fairness concerns (such as how AI-generated works compete with authored-created works) and competition concerns (such as the use of contracts and TPMs to strengthen copyright) also pervade copyright discourse. The human rights discourse has pervaded many areas of copyright among others from the liability of intermediaries (such as art 17 directive 2019/790) to the exceptions and limitations to copyright. Therefore the keynote and the following session were essentially devoted to these countries and how human rights and the case law of the CJEU and ECtHR affects them. Likewise, EEA countries and associated countries also have to keep abreast of EU law developments. Post-Brexit, the UK still has retained much of EU law, including copyright law, and still follows CJUE precedents in the field of copyright until now. In recent years, the CJEU and national courts have increasingly referred to human rights to justify copyright but also to balance it with other human rights. In 2022, the conference’s theme was “The Constitutional Turn in Copyright Law – From human rights, to competition aspects and fairness concerns”. Hosted by the University of Nottingham Commercial Law Centre (UNCLC) “The Constitutional Turn in Copyright Law – From human rights, to competition aspects and fairness concerns”
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