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Copyright and Open Access for Academic Works

Frank Müller-Langer, Max Planck Institute for Intellectual Property, Competition and Tax Law
Richard Watt, University of Canterbury

Abstract

In a recent paper, Steven Shavell (2009) has argued strongly in favor of eliminating copyright from academic works. Shavell analyses the pros and cons of removal of copyright and in its place to have a pure open access system, in which authors (or more likely their employers) would provide the funds that keep journals in business. In this paper we explore some of the arguments in Shavell’s paper, above all the way in which the distribution of the sources of journal revenue would be altered, and the feasible effects upon the quality of journal content. We propose a slight modification to a pure open access system which may provide for the best of both the copyright and open access worlds.

Suggested Citation

Frank Müller-Langer and Richard Watt (2010), Copyright and Open Access for Academic Works, Review of Economic Research on Copyright Issues, Vol. 7, No. 1, pp. 45-65.