Legal Aspects of Open Access to Publicly Funded Research

Lucie Guibault, Thomas Margoni

    Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

    Abstract

    Internet growth, content digitisation, and expanding “big data” and data analytics capabilities have affected the ways in which publicly funded research results are accessed, disseminated and used. While these technological advances have made sharing and processing information easier, that does not change the fact that the information may be protected by IP laws. Open access efforts, which aim to make the outputs of publicly funded research more widely accessible in digital formats, therefore raise a number of IP policy questions. To explain the interplay between open access and IP laws, this chapter provides an overview of the IP regimes that protect research outputs in a sample of OECD jurisdictions. It then reviews the open access policies that are in place in some of those jurisdictions and examines two contexts in which IP questions can arise when open access principles are applied: public/private partnerships and text and data mining.

    Original languageCanadian English
    Title of host publicationLegal Aspects of Open Access to Publicly Funded Research
    Publication statusPublished - Jan. 1 2015

    Keywords

    • Open Access
    • Copyright Law
    • Digitization
    • Big Data
    • Publicly Funded Research
    • Text and Data Mining
    • Policy
    • Research Outputs

    Disciplines

    • Comparative and Foreign Law
    • Intellectual Property Law
    • Internet Law
    • Law

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