🎉 New Working Paper 🎉 This publication is a collaborative effort that brings together the empirical and legal historical perspectives of Elena Cooper and Amy Thomas, with real-world testimony of Laurence Bouvard, a prominent voice-over artist and chair of Equity UK's Screen and New Media Committee 🤝 The paper moves beyond the heated policy debates, outlining steps for future independent academic research to rethink performers' rights in an AI-driven world 🔍 Read here 👇 https://lnkd.in/ezgz9RQc
CREATe’s Post
More Relevant Posts
-
Less than one week away from our annual symposium! This symposium covers the topic of cultural heritage taking into consideration conflict of laws, international law, art markets, property rights, human rights, and world politics. This symposium opens up a dialogue among artists, policymakers, and lawyers concerning the meaning of culture and arts to our society, and how laws and policies can more effectively protect both tangible and intangible cultural property. The panelists will examine the following questions: Why does cultural heritage matter in modern times? How does respecting cultural heritage relate to peacebuilding? What is the role of lawyers in art markets? How do lawyers represent artists in the context of art markets? And many more! To register for this event, please follow the registration link here: https://lnkd.in/eKn-SNhn.
The Albany Law Journal of Science and Technology, Vol. 34 is excited to announce our annual symposium, Cultural Patrimony, Art Markets, and Human Rights. The event will be held on February 28, 2024, from 3 - 5:30 PM in the DAMC and on Zoom, followed by a reception in the East Foyer. This symposium opens up a dialogue among artists, policymakers, and lawyers concerning the meaning of culture and arts to our society, and how laws and policies can more effectively protect both tangible and intangible cultural property. To register, and for further information, visit the registration page: https://lnkd.in/eKn-SNhn
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Jean Monnet Chair, Full Professor, Head of Department of European Studies, National University of Public Service, Budapest
Our co-edited volume with Prof. Martin Schlag Rethinking Subsidiarity has been just published by Springer. Our volume, by having an interdisciplinary approach argues that subsidiarity is the way forward, a kind of magic key to future, an organizational principle that could contribute to overcome contemporary political, social, and legal challenges and to foster socially responsible and ethical behavior in societies. https://lnkd.in/dWseTdfi
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
New Blog Post! Dive into the complexities of Modern & Contemporary Art Transactions. The recent seminar hosted by the Institute of Art and Law and Wedlake Bell explored insights on art contracts, authentication, collective societies, and more. Check out the seminar report by Laura Villarraga Albino https://buff.ly/3R7Gxy8
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Here we are: 2.5 months after launching the first UDHR seminar and nearly a year after crafting the concept note for this entire initiative. What better way to conclude this enriching and insightful journey than with a seminar on cultural rights, featuring our dear colleague and one of the organizers of the UDHR Seminar Series at the RUG, Vanessa Tünsmeyer. Join us for the final UDHR seminar and remember that …. [paraphrasing Eleanor Roosevelt] universal human rights aren't mere words on paper or distant ideals—they begin right where we live, work, and learn. #humanrights75 #universaldeclarationofhumanrights #culturalrights
On December 12th, the eighth seminar of the Faculty of Law's initiative to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR) will take place. In this seminar, Asst. Prof. Vanessa Tünsmeyer will present and discuss the topic of “Contemporary Challenges to Cultural Rights”. More about the event here: https://lnkd.in/eKVmHYVS
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Join Dr. Nada Ali from UMass Boston and Fiona Bolt from Amnesty International as they explore the challenges of working with Amnesty's archival material, the benefits of digitisation, and the profound impact of incorporating testimonies and personal accounts into education and research. Watch here bit.ly/3XKooKm
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Theorist, Writer, Curator and Lecturer Theory of Culture, Technology and Ecology - ArtScience Interfaculty / Interactive Media Design at Royal Academy of Arts & Royal Conservatoire, The Hague
Recently out on Cahiers Costech, my essay A different sense of time - Reading Tactical Media. This short essay explores the complicated relationship of activist and experimental / artistic practices around digital and online media to the problem of time. My argument in the essay is that the entrapment in the immediacy of an ‘eternal now’ impedes a deeper critical discussion and understanding of these activist and experimental practices. https://lnkd.in/ed2hDCbq
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
We conclude our blog texts on the history of the philosophy of justice with two texts, in which we examine justice in the modern world. In this first text Max Tallberg answers the question whether the modern world can be held just. https://lnkd.in/d7shJgyC
Does Justice Prevail in the Present-Day World?
https://www.globalvisions.fi/en/
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Publication alert: we build on existing research in autocracies to show that personalist leaders (or those who rely on their own characteristics, rather than other methods of justifying their rule) are more likely to abuse civil rights. Think leaders like Trump or Bolsanaro, as two examples, who make claims that they alone can fix what ails a society. In broader implications, there’s been an ongoing debate about whether (and/or how) democracies are failing or a growing autocratization. Leaders like the above actively attack institutions that safeguard democratic freedoms, including those that are designed to protect human rights, which can look like democratic backsliding in the short term. Check out the article for more!
Thrilled to announce that you can access Stephen Bagwell, Meridith LaVelle, and I's latest article in the Journal of Conflict Resolution! We argue (and find) that leaders relying on personalist legitimation worsens human rights conditions. You can find the article at this link: https://lnkd.in/eu9w77gM
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Great resource for sport and human rights literature from 2023 👇 A call for input for the 2024 list is open now. If you have a relevant publication coming out this year, feel free to share with me or my colleague Shubham Jain!
As part of the Centre’s educational work, we publish an annual Sport & Human Rights Reading List, which contains references & links to carefully selected publications relevant to the broader field of sport and human rights. The 2024 list is out now, check it out here 👇 https://lnkd.in/dgrsNPkn
To view or add a comment, sign in
-
Get Decolonial Archival Futures in your organisation's library or on your bookshelf. It's a well-informed and carefully considered analysis of settler archives, giving readers clear examples of how to form better relationships between users and custodians. #review #bookreview
On the website, Deborah Lee-Talbot reviews Krista McCracken and Skylee-Storm Hogan-Stacey's Decolonial Archival Futures 📚 https://lnkd.in/gFeQtGEa
To view or add a comment, sign in
1,391 followers