The types of works that many students and faculty would like to be able to 
include in scholarly works are not necessarily from other scholarly works. For 
example, scholars in my doctoral discipline of communication study a wide range 
of types of works including newspapers, television, films, cartoons, 
advertising, blogs and social media, and public relations materials. It is very 
useful for scholars to be able to include images and text from the primary 
source materials, either as illustration or for purposes of critique. Obtaining 
permission to use even small excerpts of such works is time-consuming at best. 
I argue that it would be in the best interests of scholarship to advocate for 
strong fair use / fair dealing exceptions for research and academic critique 
globally and accept that more restrictive licenses may be necessary to avoid 
the potential for re-use errors that could easily occur with blanket licenses 
allowing broad re-use. For example, while it makes sense to allow scholars to 
include small movie stills in an academic piece, it could be quite problematic 
for scholars to include such items in works that grant blanket commercial and 
re-use rights downstream. 

This illustrates what I see as one of the problems with the one size fits all 
CC-BY license preferred by some open access advocates (which I consider to be a 
serious error): what I interpret as an implicit assumption that all of the 
works scholars are likely to want to re-use are other scholarly works. Rather 
than making assumptions, let's do some research to find out what scholars and 
students would like to be able to re-use. Anecdotally, in my experience the 
most popular items for re-use are images from popular culture (especially 
characters from the Simpsons TV series), not scholarly works. Scholarly 
journals like to use photos to add interest and aesthetic value. If it is the 
case that the greatest interest in re-use for scholars involves works from 
popular culture / outside the academy, then ubiquitous CC-BY licenses for 
absolutely every scholarly article, book, and dataset in the whole world would 
not solve the primary re-use question for a majority of scholars.

This is not meant to suggest that advocacy for global fair use / fair dealing 
rights for academic research and critique is an easy task, rather to raise the 
question of whether this is an appropriate and useful goal for scholarly works. 

This post is part of the Creative Commons and Open Access Critique series on my 
scholarly blog, The Imaginary Journal of Poetic Economics. To comment on the 
blogpost: 
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.ca/2015/04/a-case-for-strong-fair-use-fair-dealing.html

Creative Commons and Open Access Critique series:
http://poeticeconomics.blogspot.ca/2012/10/critique-of-cc-by-series.html

best,

-- 
Dr. Heather Morrison
Assistant Professor
École des sciences de l'information / School of Information Studies
University of Ottawa
http://www.sis.uottawa.ca/faculty/hmorrison.html
Sustaining the Knowledge Commons http://sustainingknowledgecommons.org/
heather.morri...@uottawa.ca



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