[blindlaw] Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Opening the Ebook for the Print Disabled

Paul Harpur p.harpur at law.uq.edu.au
Tue Mar 28 12:36:40 UTC 2017


Honestly I did not and I am chasing it up right now.  


-----Original Message-----
From: BlindLaw [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf Of Kelby Carlson via BlindLaw
Sent: Tuesday, 28 March 2017 9:36 PM
To: Blind Law Mailing List
Cc: Kelby Carlson
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] Discrimination, Copyright and Equality: Opening the Ebook for the Print Disabled

You realize that this book isn't available as an ebook on the Cambridge website, don't you?

On 3/28/17, Paul Harpur via BlindLaw <blindlaw at nfbnet.org> wrote:
> On 30 March 2017 my latest monograph, :”Discrimination, Copyright and
> Equality: Opening the Ebook for the Print Disabled”, will be released 
> in Europe and the UK.  It can be found on the Cambridge University 
> Press website:
>  www.cambridge.org/9781107119000
> This monograph contributes to disability rights scholarship and legal 
> advocacy.  It analyses the interaction between anti-discrimination and 
> copyright laws, in the international human rights and copyright 
> jurisdictions, as well as in the national jurisdictions in Australia, 
> Canada, the UK and USA.  This work builds on international and 
> domestic notions of digital equality and rights to access information.
> The core thesis of this monograph is that technology now creates the 
> possibility that everyone in the world, regardless of their abilities 
> or disabilities, should be able to access the written word.  Why then 
> is there still a book famine where 5% to 7% of the world’s books are 
> available to people with print disabilities in wealthy, advanced 
> economies, and less than 1% in the majority of countries?
>
> While anti-discrimination and equality laws operate to enable access, 
> these laws have limited impact on the overriding impact of market 
> forces and copyright laws that focus on restricting access to 
> information.  For decades the print disabled have been denied reading 
> equality and have instead had their access to information limited by 
> legal frameworks and resource allocations that tolerated minor 
> exceptions to the mainstream consumption of books and information.
> The recent United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with 
> Disabilities (‘CRPD’), and other international developments, have 
> swept in a new disability politics which is altering what is expected 
> from laws and institutions.  The human rights paradigm has created the 
> possibility of achieving equality.  The challenge is to analyse 
> barriers to this dream of reading equality and craft laws and 
> institutions that open the E-Book for the world’s print disabled.
>
> Dr Paul Harpur | Senior Lecturer
> TC Beirne School of Law | The University of Queensland Room W205, 
> Level 2 | Forgan Smith Building | St Lucia Campus | Brisbane 
> Queensland 4072 | Australia T +61 7 336 58864 | M +61 417 635 609 | E 
> p.harpur at law.uq.edu.au | W law.uq.edu.au/pdh
>
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