Post Tagged with: "Art law"

9th World Congress on Family Law & Children’s Rights, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 27 – 30 July 2025

9th World Congress on Family Law & Children’s Rights, Cambridge, United Kingdom, 27 – 30 July 2025

Topic: Children Caught in Conflict – Inspiring Positive Change Venue: Cambridge, United Kingdom Date: 27 – 30 July 2025 The conference is organised in partnership with the Faculty of Law and the University of Cambridge: The theme is ‘Children Caught in Conflict – Inspiring Positive Change’. The conference is a […]

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Family Law Symposium at Commonwealth Law Conference 2025, Malta, 5 April 2025

Family Law Symposium at Commonwealth Law Conference 2025, Malta, 5 April 2025

The Family Law Symposium will be held in the wings of the Commonwealth Law Conference 2025. It is co-hosted by the CLA Family Law Committee, IAFL and the FLBA on the theme: “Show me the Money” – Family Law, Trusts and Recognition and Enforcement.

Ms. Lavanya Regunathan Fischer will be delivering a speech on ‘Enforcement of orders in foreign jurisdictions’.

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Moral Rights in Art: A Critical Appraisal of the Indian Perspective

Moral Rights in Art: A Critical Appraisal of the Indian Perspective

The article provides a doctrinal analysis of the “moral rights” jurisprudence that started with the Amar Nath Sehgal v Union of India (2005) case and was recently propounded upon in the Raj Rewal v Union of India (2019) judgment of the Delhi High Court. The article argues that the court’s omission in Sehgal to deal with the consequence of “moral rights” on property rights has allowed subsequent benches to dilute the original doctrine.

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AI-Generated Art and Indian Copyright Law: A Legal Vacuum?

AI-Generated Art and Indian Copyright Law: A Legal Vacuum?

The advent of AI has globally taken the art industry by storm. It has raised concerns surrounding IPR. This has led to unease around possibilities of AI using copyrighted works without authorization. The copyright laws in India are governed by The Copyright Act of 1957. The limited scope of Indian copyright laws has been slightly widened by the 1994 amendment, which recognised computer generated artworks as copyrightable. However, questions around authorship and rights arising thereof remain under ambiguity. This scenario has highlighted a lacunae in the Indian copyright system.

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