Title of article
Copyright Information Management and the University Library: Staffing, Organizational Placement and Authority Original Research Article
Author/Authors
Rebecca S. Albitz، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2013
Pages
7
From page
429
To page
435
Abstract
Copyright plays a central role in numerous activities within higher education, and educating a university community about copyright law should be a priority, if only to protect the institution from lawsuits. But, based upon a literature review, institutions devote a more resources to other intellectual property activities – plagiarism detection, technology transfer and illegal file sharing management – than for general copyright education activities. Utilizing Mintzbergʹs organizational model and its discussion of organizational placement and legitimacy as a conceptual framework, this study explores the current copyright education structures among the universities that comprise the Consortium on Institutional Cooperation, otherwise known as the CIC or the Big Ten, to determine whether organizational placement, credentials of individuals, and resources devoted to this activity affect the legitimacy of the office and the authority of copyright officers to fulfill their responsibilities. The results of this study suggest that organizational placement, while it plays a role, is not nearly as important as the credentials of the individual in the position in conveying legitimacy.
Keywords
Copyright management , Library administration , Organizational theory
Journal title
The Journal of Academic Librarianship
Serial Year
2013
Journal title
The Journal of Academic Librarianship
Record number
1231666
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