Prof. Brennan on copyright in Australia – IPwars.com
Late last year, Prof. David Brennan published Copyright LawFederation Press.
Those of you who have heard David speak or read any of his wide-ranging publications will no doubt appreciate that this is a book worth adding to your arsenal libraries.
If you are not one of that lucky number, perhaps you will be further encouraged by the words of one Hon William Gummow AC:
Since its enactment more than 50 years ago, the 1968 Act has moved significantly from the classic structure of copyright laws. This is the product of judicial decisions and much legislative activity. The busy practitioner will often be presented on short notice with copyright disputes and needs an authoritative text to be ready at hand. In those law schools where the subject is taught to undergraduates the students need access to a stimulating study of the statute and case law.
This book answers their needs. The author has an engaging literary style which leads the readers through the conceptual thickness of copyright law. The publisher is also to be congratulated for the preparation which has gone into the production of the book and its printing in Australia.
from His Honor’s review Copyright Law by David Brennan — (2022) 51 Aust Bar Rev 391 (paywall).
One slight quibble, it might be thought a slight disservice to the efforts of the late Prof. Lahore to mark his 1977 monograph as the last comprehensive text specifically serving the Australian market given his much expanded Copyright Law looseleaf service published in 1988 and, of course, the continuing mammoth Copyright and Designs, first published in 1996. (Of course, I would say that!). Nonetheless, that quibble aside, if you are following copyright law in Australia, you should be finding this book.