[Ct-nfb] Marrakesh Treaty

Jim McCollum j.mccollum64 at comcast.net
Mon Jan 2 21:53:01 UTC 2017


https://nfb.org/images/nfb/documents/word/2017washingtonseminar/final_2017_marrakesh_treaty_fact_sheet.docx

July 24, 2002
The Marrakesh Treaty to Facilitate Access to Published Works for Persons Who Are Blind, Visually Impaired, or Otherwise Print Disabled (Marrakesh Treaty)

 

An international copyright treaty will give blind Americans access to millions of 
published works and improve the distribution of books around the globe.

 
 

Millions of Americans are being denied access to published works. Despite the ability to convert print books into accessible formats like Braille, audio, and digital copies, over 95 percent of published works are unavailable to people with print disabilities. Literacy and equal participation in society are critical elements of a fulfilling and independent life, but until uniformity is built into the international copyright system, blind Americans will be excluded from accessing works. A blind student seeking to learn Spanish will likely struggle to find an accessible format; a work printed in English may have already been converted into an accessible format overseas, but because copies are not exchanged across borders, domestic entities might need to make a duplicate copy or just might deny access altogether by failing to reproduce the work.

 

An uncoordinated legal approach prevents the cross-border exchange of accessible books. Unlike the United States, where copyright law includes the Chafee Amendment and other exceptions, two-thirds of the world’s nations do not have domestic copyright laws that permit making copies for the blind, limiting the number of works available in an accessible format. Moreover, many countries consider distribution of accessible copies an infringement as well, and even amongst nations that permit distribution, limitations vary. Instead of exchanging books across borders, works are needlessly duplicated, and circulation is significantly limited.

 

The Marrakesh Treaty was adopted to achieve this goal. On June 27, 2013, a diplomatic conference convened by the World Intellectual Property Organization, (WIPO) in Morocco adopted the Marrakesh Treaty with enthusiastic support from the US delegation. The treaty, signed by the US on October 2, 2013, currently has eighty-eight signatories, has been ratified by twenty-five countries, and has entered into force as of September 30, 2016.

 

The Marrakesh Treaty has broad stakeholder support. Blind people should have full and equal access to all works that enrich lives, further education, and share critical information; the treaty balances this priority with the interests of rights holders. WIPO’s adoption of the Marrakesh Treaty was supported by American-based companies, the international publishing community, legal experts, and blindness advocates. The treaty will have tangible benefits for all involved. This is why Congress must act swiftly to ratify the Marrakesh Treaty and pass its associated implementing legislation.




The Marrakesh Treaty calls for contracting parties to provide in their national copyright laws for a limitation or exception that allows for the:

 

Reproduction of works by an authorized entity for the purposes of converting them into accessible format copies exclusively for beneficiary persons.

 

Distribution of accessible format copies exclusively to beneficiary persons

 

Import of accessible format copies for the purposes of making them available domestically

 

Export of accessible format copies for the purposes of making them available to a beneficiary person in another country

 

Remove Barriers to Access of Published Works.

Support ratification of the Marrakesh Treaty.

 
 

For more information, contact:

Gabe Cazares, Government Affairs Specialist, National Federation of the Blind

Phone: (410) 659-9314, extension 2206, Email: gcazares at nfb.org

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Mark Riccobono, President  | 200 East Wells Street at Jernigan Place Baltimore, MD 21230  | 410 659 9314  | www.nfb.org

 


Jim McCollum
Legislative Co-ordinator
National Federation of the Blind of Connecticut
j.mccollum64 at comcast.net
860-581-0430
Sent from my iPhone
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