Towards a European Research Freedom Act: A Reform Agenda for Research Exceptions in the EU Copyright Acquis
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| Publication date | 08-2025 |
| Journal | IIC - International Review of Intellectual Property and Competition Law |
| Volume | Issue number | 56 | 7 |
| Pages (from-to) | 1329–1358 |
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| Abstract |
This article explores the impact of EU copyright, related rights and sui generis database protection on the use of protected knowledge resources in scientific research (Sect. 1).
We take a fundamental rights approach, focusing on the need to strike a
fair balance between, on the one hand, copyright as an exponent of the
right to property and, on the other hand, freedom of expression, freedom
of information, and the freedom of the arts and sciences (Sect. 2).
Surveying the current copyright/research interface reveals that the
existing legal framework lacks adequate mechanisms for reconciling the
divergent interests of copyright holders and researchers. Structural
deficiencies are identified, such as fragmented and overly restrictive
research exceptions, opaque lawful access provisions, outdated
non-commercial use requirements, legal uncertainty arising from the
three-step test in the EU copyright acquis, obstacles created by
the protection of paywalls and other technological measures, and the
risk of contracts overriding statutory research freedoms (Sect. 3).
Empirical data confirm that access barriers, use restrictions, and the
lack of harmonised rules for transnational research collaborations
impede the work of researchers in the EU (Sect. 3).
Against this backdrop, we propose legislative reform, in particular the
introduction of a mandatory, open-ended research exemption to ensure
reliable breathing space for scientific research across EU Member
States, the clarification of lawful access criteria, a more flexible
approach to public-private partnerships, and additional rules to support
modern research methods, such as text and data mining. This reform
agenda could form part of a broader European Research Freedom Act, aimed
at establishing a balanced legal framework: an updated EU acquis that safeguards existing rights, such as copyright and sui generis database rights, while fostering innovation, collaboration, and scientific progress (Sect. 4).
As a further step in the right direction, EU legislation should
harmonise secondary publication rights, enabling researchers to provide
open access to research results. However, this aspect of the reform
agenda is beyond the scope of the present inquiry and will therefore be
the focus of another study.
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| Document type | Article |
| Language | English |
| Published at | https://doi.org/10.1007/s40319-025-01604-6 |
| Downloads |
s40319-025-01604-6
(Final published version)
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