ABSTRACT

In this book, Benjamin Farrand employs an interdisciplinary approach that combines legal analysis with political theory to explore the development of copyright law in the EU. Farrand utilises Foucault’s concept of Networks of Power and Culpepper’s Quiet Politics to assess the adoption and enforcement of copyright law in the EU, including the role of industry representative, cross-border licensing, and judicial approaches to territorial restrictions. Focusing in particular on legislative initiatives concerning copyright, digital music and the internet, Networks of Power in Digital Copyright Law and Policy: Political Salience, Expertise and the Legislative Process demonstrates the connection between copyright law and complex network relationships.

This book presents an original socio-political theoretical framework for assessing developments in copyright law that will interest researchers and post-graduate students of law and politics, as well as those more particularly concerned with political theory, EU and copyright law.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|22 pages

Networks of power, quiet politics and political salience

Establishing a framework for analysing European digital copyright initiatives

chapter 2|27 pages

European digital copyright law

chapter 3|28 pages

One market, divided?

The fragmented state of the market for digital music distribution in the European Union, and judicial approaches to territorial restrictions

chapter 4|25 pages

Networks of power I

The role of industry representatives in framing policies regarding the scope and duration of copyright

chapter 5|26 pages

Networks of power II

The role of industry representatives in framing policies regarding the enforcement of copyright

chapter 6|25 pages

Networks of power III

The role of industry representatives in framing policies regarding cross-border licensing

chapter 7|18 pages

Power and resistance I

Where there is power, there is resistance

chapter 8|28 pages

Power and resistance II

(In)civil society, changing networks and the unquiet politics