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Re: Librarians and their institutional attorneys
Hi. A response to Ann Okerson's question:
At my institution, we usually draw on the expertise of university
counsel when something new and significant, at an institutional
level, appears in a license. For example, some product licenses
from the United States now feature clauses that state that
licensed material can not be sent to authorised users in
countries under interdiction by the American government. As a
library in another country, this could cause us serious
difficulties; we have users and programs in "embargoed" nations
and to deny these people access to the content would go against
the basic tenets of a publicly-funded institution (equal access,
all that). Needless to say, when these clauses first appeared
(approximately a year ago), we sent these to the university
lawyers for their opinion.
Hope this helps.
Andrew
--
Andrew Waller
Serials Librarian
Collections Services
University of Calgary Library
waller@ucalgary.ca
(403) 220-8133 voice
(403) 284-2109 fax