RuZ - Recht und Zugang addresses all legal issues related to accessing digital collections, whether these may be libraries, museums or archives. The topics are almost unlimited and range from copyright to data protection law to labour law. Practical relevance is crucial : What requirements must be met in order to make digital content publicly accessible? What needs to be considered when collections want to digitize their holdings? Who is responsible for ensuring that the legal requirements are met? After all, it's about communication, because the most beautiful and important collections remain useless, if no one looks at them and nobody talks about them. Recht und Zugang not only aspires to look at collections in their entirety - from the municipal art library to the world-famous museum, but also to set the scene in which collections acquire their contents and process them in such a way that they are perceived and used. Recht und Zugang aims at the institutions themselves, ie at museums, archives and libraries, but also informs advisors who support collections in fulfilling their tasks. The journal’s aim is also reflected in the editorial board, which consists of experts who work in and for collections and assist those on a daily basis. Recht und Zugang is currently published with two issues a year and aspires to be as open as possible. The contributions are available in the Nomos eLibrary, published under a CC-BY-SA license.
The German Research Foundation has presented a comprehensive analysis of current (mis)developments with the position paper "Academic publishing as a Foundation and Area of leverage for Research Assessment". She tries to counteract this by adapting...
The handling of child and youth pornography in archives has become more sensitive in recent years. This was triggered on the one hand by the discovery of corresponding photos in a teacher's estate in the Wiesbaden State Archives and on the other...
Divided into two parts, this article showcases, by focusing on access to public documents, the freedom of information frameworks at the European level. Part 1 considers the EU, which is the only supranational organization that has subjected itself...
In its Chamber judgment in the case of Šeks v. Croatia (Application No. 39325/20) of 3 February 2022, the ECtHR unanimously found that the denial of an access request aimed at the subsequent publication of secret presidential files held by the...
Völkerrechtsblog’s hybrid conference “Opening Access, Closing the Knowledge Gap – International Legal Scholarship going online” aimed to expand the notion of ‘open access’ from a mere standard of publication to the continuous and active...
29 September 2022 marked the passing of Daniel Hürlimann, an open access pioneer and Switzerland’s first professor of law and computer science (legal informatics). A researcher, attorney, journal editor, book publisher, NGO activist, and father...