Saturday 17 September 2011

The puzzle of a muzzle


Copyright, cultural diversity and censorship:

Variable geometry for copyright duration?

Professor Jeremy Phillips, editor of the Oxford University Press' Journal of Intellectual Property Law and Practice (JIPLP), kindly published a first draft of this paper on the JIPLP blog:

Most Americans consider freedom of speech as one of the highest values protected under their Constitution. Europeans equally dislike censorship and invoke article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights, the equivalent of the First Amendment, stating that everyone has the right to freedom of expression that, subject to certain limitations, includes “freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers.” A similar rule applies in all other true democracies worldwide. In various jurisdictions, notably in South Africa, citizens can enforce this right not only against the State, but also vis-à-vis private entities.

Now, is there a case against “marketing censorship”, meaning censorship not from public sources, but from private ones? - Tunisia and Egypt experienced over the last three decades strong public censorship from their kleptomaniac former presidents and their cliques. What about us in Western democracies? - Let me suggest that we are subject to censorship of a private kind.

Disproportionately high standards of intellectual property protection are incentives to disburse excessive expenditures in advertising for contents. They are the primary means for market domination. This reality is detrimental to the creation, production and dissemination of films, books, music and other cultural expressions that do not enjoy comparable investments in attracting the public's attention. In other words, excessive copyright, trademark and trade name protection generally contribute to marginalizing and excluding contents and aesthetics that are culturally different from the economically dominant ones. They do not enjoy competitive marketing power even when they have the same or more audience appeal, and this is how the muzzle works in our very own neighborhood. A few top executives and their apparatchiks in the film, book and music industries dispose of highly concentrated power on marketing, and they abuse this power to culturally discriminate. They impose their preferences upon you and me and everybody around the world, and muzzle all the rest. They are our Ben Ali's and Hosni Mubarak's censorship apparatus.

Let me quote Michel Foucault to add a key piece to the puzzle of muzzle: “You act on reality by acting on its representation.”

The United States lost the Vietnam War in reality. In its representation on screen, however, they seem to have won it. How many Vietnam war films could audiences in the United States and abroad watch over the last decades that were authored by Vietnamese? To what extent did this one-sided view prepare mainstream public opinion for new wars in Afghanistan and Iraq?

A “variable geometry in copyright duration” could solve the problem of market censorship caused by excessive intellectual property protection: the higher the marketing investments the shorter the copyright duration of protection. In other words, the works with modest advertising shall keep the full term of copyright protection (70 years after the author's death), whereas this duration shall be shorter for works enjoying high investments in their publicity. As a consequence, a great diversity of small and medium sized fishes will flourish while big sharks are kept at a safe distance.

For the full paper, please visit the JIPLP weblog and make comments.

Please find also a French version of this contribution in the Swiss newspaper Le Temps, “Une idée pour épauler les créateurs indépendants”, 27 May 2011.


Friday 6 May 2011

Commercial speech and slow death of the diversity of human expressions

Intellectual property and access to cultural diversity - Variable geometry for copyright duration?

Commercial speech and slow death of the diversity of human expressions

Tuesday 10 May 2011 at 1300
Speaker: Dr Christophe Germann, Attorney at Law
Venue: Oxford Law Faculty Senior Common Room

For further information, please see: www.law.ox.ac.uk/event=11084

The presentation discusses the idea of “variable geometry in copyright duration” as a possible new solution to implement article 7 of the 2005 UNESCO Convention.

This proposal that can be summarized as follows:

The terms of copyright protection for cultural goods and services, including entertainment, shall be subject to variable geometry: the higher the marketing investments the shorter the copyright duration of protection.

In a first stage, copyright terms shall be reduced down to the minimum of 50 years according to Article 12 of the TRIPS Agreement when the protected works enjoy high investments in their advertisement.

In a second stage, the EU shall propose an amendment of this provision at the WTO aimed at further reducing the terms of protection for copyrighted works enjoying predatory marketing, for example to one year after the first public release of the work.

The full duration of copyright protection provided by the copyright duration directive shall continue to apply to works that enjoy none or little marketing investments.

This new idea shall provide a level playing field for talents and contents from all cultures by imposing a desincentive for excessive marketing that silences talents and contents from diversified cultural origins.

This proposal is arguably in line with the rationale of copyright protection. The EU is currently contemplating an overhaul of certain elements of the copyright system in order to adapt it to the digital age. We suggest taking this opportunity by mainstreaming cultural diversity and introducing variable geometry of copyright duration in the context of this reform.

For more information on this proposal aimed at improving access to culture and reinforcing competition on a level playing field via copyright, please refer to the long version of the study for the European Parliament on the implementation of the 2005 UNESCO Convention on cultural diversity at www.diversitystudy.eu – see section “Main Study” (Introduction and Study Paper 2B, version of November 2010) as well as to the video discussion by Prof. Fiona MacMillan (University of London) in the section “Stakeholders' Dialogue”.

Tuesday 22 February 2011

Presentation at the 2011 War Crimes Conference - University of London

Time to re-think genocide when the “crime of crimes” depends on the color of a star


The indictment of the Pol Pot regime leaders Khieu Samphan, Nuon Chea, Ieng Sary and Ieng Thirith by the Co-Investigating Judges of the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia exemplifies to the extreme the main issue of the legal concept of “genocide” as it stands today. According to the closing decision of 15 September 2010, only Cham and Vietnamese shall be considered as victims of genocide. For all other victims – presumably more than one and half million of Cambodians – the legal qualifications of the evil that they suffered are crimes against humanity and, in some case, war crimes. From the perspective of international criminal law, notably concerning sanctions, this distinction will not be meaningful. However, the symbolic significance of the concept of “genocide” as “crime of crimes” is likely to cause injustice among victims as well as a dilution of crimes against humanity and war crimes.


Christophe Germann therefore submits to suspend the application of the 1948 Genocide Convention while acknowledging that it has fully accomplished its historic mission. This Convention arguably cannot be amended in a way that avoids incoherence and redundancy with newer law. As a solution, the author proposes to introduce a novel international crime, the crime against human diversity, as an aggravated form of crimes against humanity in the Rome statute and like instruments.


Deterrence of crimes against human diversity by way of international criminal law can contribute to reinforce the diversity of human expressions, including cultural, social, political and ideological expressions. It can work as a novel safeguard against the mobilization of civil society by the most radical conflict entrepreneurs. As such, it may become a most effective means of early prevention of mass atrocities.


Christophe Germann presents this contribution at the 2nd Biennial War Crimes Conference: Justice? Whose Justice? Punishment, Mediation or Reconciliation.