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Copyright After Death

Deven R. Desai, Princeton University

Abstract

Should copyright extend after death? In the United States, the duration of copyright is the author’s life plus seventy years. Discussions of copyright often treat pre and post death copyright as equal, holding that the entire length of the term faces uniform problems and fulfills uniform goals. Copyright law operates with a hidden assumption: that copyright after death is the same as copyright during life. Numerous debates over copyright’s duration rely on this post-mortem assumption. In this article, Professor Deven Desai argues that this assumption is false and that copyright’s extension after the author’s death is unjustifiable. He explores the historical, philosophical, and economic justifications for copyright after death and concludes that it should not matter in copyright policy.

Suggested Citation

Deven R. Desai. 2009. "Copyright After Death" ExpressO
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/deven_desai/6