1838 | Great Britain |
1876 | The Berlin Convention |
1885-7 | The Berne Union, an international convention; |
1891 | U. S. A.'s Chace Act offered protection to qualified foreign, non- resident authors; |
1928 | The Rome Revision included 16 nations, among whom were Canada and Great Britain. |
1948 | The Brussels Revision was subscribed to by 45 countries; in consequence, Britain altered its own legislation in 1956 to comply. |
1967 | The Stockholm Revision resulted in 34 countries' establishing The World Intellectual Property Organization. |
1971 | The Paris Revision included 59 countries and constituted The Universal Copyright Convention. |
Related Materials
- Nineteenth-Century British and American Copyright Law:
- Dickens's 1842 Reading Tour: Launching the Copyright Question in Tempestuous Seas
- Dickens's 1867-68 Reading Tour: Re-Opening the Copyright Question
- A Canadian Satirist Looks at Nineteenth-Century British and American Copyright Law
- How Did Nineteenth-Century British and American Authors Get Paid?
- How Nineteenth-Century British and American Books (Considered as Physical Objects) Differed
Created 5 January 2001
Last modified 27 December 2023