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Continuing our series of Commentaries on issues in or affecting our sector,
we are pleased to publish Charles Oppenheim's thoughts on the Marrakesh
Treaty and its implementation in UK law. In June 2013, at a diplomatic
conference in Marrakesh, the World Intellectual Property Organisation (the
UN agency concerned with everything to do with intellectual property,
including copyright) adopted the so-called Marrakesh Treaty for
facilitating access to published works for persons who are blind, visually
impaired or otherwise print disabled and in 2014 changes to the law in the
UK were implemented as part of the package of copyright law reforms.

*The Marrakesh Treaty and its Implications* (Charles Oppenheim, August
2016) can be found at http://tinyurl.com/hdpj3ty

Other Commentaries in this series are:

   - Legal Deposit and Access to Parliamentary Papers
   - Disabled Student Allowances changes – key issues for libraries
   - Draft Investigatory Powers Bill: CILIP Response to the Joint Select
   Committee
   - Information Management and ISO9001:2015
   - EU Safe Harbour: Regulating data flows to the US

... all of which can be found in the Commentaries section of our web site:
http://tinyurl.com/hnheyu5