*apologies for cross-posting*


♦ Workshop dates: 14th & 15th November 2013
♦ PLEASE CONFIRM ATTENDANCE VIA EMAIL by 18 October 2013 to Julia Holland
at taag.chapter[at]gmail.com
♦ Place: Manulife Financial Head Office, 200 Bloor St. East, Toronto
♦ Cost: $150 for *day one* (14th Nov.), $225 for both days (14th & 15th
Nov.)
♦ *Minimum registration : 12 people for both days by 18 October*
♦ Maximum registration : 20


A link to the registration form is now been added to the taag news page at
URL:
http://aao-archivists.ca/news/taag-news

or, you can download the form directly from URL:
http://aao-archivists.ca/resources/document-downloads/doc_download/247-taag-copyright-workshop

This two-day workshop will provide an overview of the Canadian Copyright
Act (including the recent amendments) and related case law of particular
relevance to archivists.

The first day will provide an intensive overview of how the Canadian
copyright law works, with particular attention to its application in the
digital environment. Topics to be covered include: criteria for copyright
protection, ownership and duration of copyright, the rights of copyright
owners, users’ rights, international copyright, and how to analyze a
copyright question.

The second day will give participants an opportunity to apply what they
have learned as they discuss case studies about copyright issues primarily
of interest to archivists and others who maintain collections of records or
other material, including photographs, digitizing holdings, and
reprographic services.

Instructor: Dr. Jean Dryden
A senior information professional with experience in archives, records
management, and librarianship, Jean Dryden's expertise in copyright has
been developed during many years as an archivist in the government,
education, and not-for-profit sectors. As Chair of the Bureau of Canadian
Archivists Copyright Committee, she played a lead role in successful
lobbying for exceptions for libraries, archives and museums in the 1997
amendments to the Copyright Act. She is the author of Demystifying
Copyright: A Researcher's Guide to Copyright in Canadian Libraries and
Archives; the second edition, revised to reflect the 2012 amendments, will
be published this fall.

Her doctoral dissertation investigated the copyright practices of Canadian
archival repositories in making their holdings available on the Internet.
Her consulting practice was established in 1998 to advise organizations
about copyright policy and practice, and to educate clients about copyright
issues, particularly the application of copyright in the digital
environment.

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