Authors' rights
Authors' rights are internationally protected by the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works and by other similar treaties.
LibGuides: Author Rights Resources: Understanding Author Rights
The resources in this guide are designed to help authors understand and maintain their rights throughout the scholarly publication process.
FAQ: Authorship and Ownership in U.S. Copyright Law
By choosing not to transfer all exclusive rights for all time, authors retain some rights to reproduce, distribute, and revise their own works.
Author's Rights and Copyright - LibGuides
For the purposes of copyright law, an author is anyone who creates original expression in a fixed medium, like a book, journal article, computer ...
Author's rights and intellectual property - Mondragon Unibertsitatea
Who owns the intellectual property of a work? The intellectual property of a piece of work belongs to its author, since it was he or she that created it. This ...
Authors and Copyright | Scholarly Communications
This section provides information on author rights and related resources to assist authors with management of their rights. Background What Righ...
Scholarly Communication Toolkit: Author's Rights - ACRL LibGuides
Authors should take care to assign the rights to their work in a manner that permits them and their students and colleagues to use their work in teaching, ...
Authors' Rights - Copyright Quick Reference Guide
This guide provides basic information on copyright law to help you make sense of your copyright questions.
Copyright Introduction: Authors' Rights - Library Guides
All authors co-own the copyright to the resulting work. Each author can transfer ownership of the copyright yet must share any profits from the ...
Author Rights & the SPARC Author Addendum
SPARC provides a full set of resources, including an author addendum, to teach authors about their rights, and to help effectively manage copyright.
Understand Your Rights as an Author | OU Libraries
OU Libraries offers support to help you understand your publishing agreement, complete the addendum, and negotiate your contract.
The difference between author's rights and copyright - Copibec
Authors' rights protect the creators first and foremost. That is the essential difference between copyright and authors' rights.
Authors' Rights & Copyright - Research Guides at West Virginia ...
Authors' rights refers to the intellectual property rights that authors, and other creators, have to the materials they produce.
Authors' Rights | Georgetown University Library
As an author you own the rights to your work, which gives you exclusive control as to how your work is reproduced, distributed, or performed.
Author's Rights: Copyright - LibGuides - Utah State University
Copyright is a form of legal protection for original works of authorship, including literary, dramatic, musical, and artistic works.
Author's rights, copyright & permissions - Scholarly Publishing
If you're a Tufts author, you likely hold copyright to your work unless it was transferred to someone else (like a journal publisher).
“Author's Rights” is an expression describing the legally enforceable rights granted by copyright laws to authors.
BeckerGuides: Author Rights and Copyright: How To Retain Rights
What Should Authors Do? · Anticipate the ways you wish to reuse and disseminate your work · Use a publisher that allows authors to retain ...
Author Rights and Publishing Agreements - LibGuides at Texas ...
This guide gives an overview about your rights as an author, considerations, and tips to negotiate and ensure access and continued rights to your work.
Author's Rights | University Libraries
Author's rights is often just another way of referring to copyright, and it includes the suite of exclusive rights granted to the creators of original works.