U.S. Copyright Office
Senate Studies

Studies prepared by
the U.S. Copyright Office
the U.S. Senate

Copyright Law Revision Studies
Studies 1 to 34
Prepared for the Subcommittee on Patents, Trademarks, and Copyrights of Committee on the Judiciary United States Senate
No.IndexTitle
1PDF
1.36MB
The History of U.S.A Copyright Law Revision From 1901 to 1954
2PDF
2.18MB
Size of the Copyright Industries
3PDF
3.03MB
The Meaning of “Writings” in the Copyright Clause of the Constitution
4PDF
8.31MB
The Moral Right of the Author
5PDF
5.47MB
The Compulsory License Provisions of the U.S. Copyright Law
6PDF
2.10MB
The Economic Aspects of the Compulsory License
7PDF
3.77MB
Copyright Notice
8PDF
1.3MB
Commercial Use of the Copyright Notice
9PDF
938kb
Use of the Copyright Notice by Libraries
10PDF
680KB
False use of Copyright Notice
11PDF
5.01MB
Divisibility of Copyrights
12PDF
2.10MB
Joint Ownership of Copyrights
13PDF
1.65MB
Works Made for Hire and on Commission
14PDF
2.18MB
Fair Use of Copyrighted Works
15PDF
1.45MB
Photoduplication of Copyrighted Material by Libraries
16PDF
3.28MB
Limitations on Peforming Rights
17PDF
6.47MB
The Registration of Copyright
18PDF
1.23MB
Authority of the Register of Copyrights To Reject Applications for Registration
19PDF
1.45MB
The Recordation of Copyright Assignments and Licenses
20PDF
3.10MB
Deposit of Copyrighted Works
21PDF
1.65MB
The Catalog of Copyright Entries
22PDF
9.47MB
The Damage Provisions of the Copyright Law
23PDF
5.75MB
The Operation of the Damage Provisions of the Copyright law: An Explanatory Study
24PDF
1.12MB
Remedies Other Than Damages for Copyright Infringement
25PDF
1.90MB
Liability of Innocent Infringers of Copyrights
26PDF
4.09MB
The Unauthorized Duplication of Sound Recordings
27PDF
1.22MB
Copyright in Architectural Works
28PDF
1.45MB
Copyright in Choreographic Works
29PDF
2.99MB
Protection of Unpublished Works
30PDF
2.71MB
Duration of Copyright
31PDF
8.10MB
Renewal of Copyright
32PDF
2.65MB
Protection of Works on Foreign Origin
33PDF
2.65MB
Copyright in Government Publications
34PDF
2.65MB
Copyright in Territories and Possession of the United States

This work is in the public domain in the United States because it is a work of the United States federal government (see 17 U.S.C. 105).

Source: U.S. Copyright Office

Next: SL-39 »

Add Your Comment

Comment:

Name:

Email (optional):

Submit your comment: