Unit 3. Additional Concepts

3.1. Types of work and duration of rights

Authors can collaborate, creating different types of works: individual, collaborative, and collective. When a work is created, the author (or authors) are granted all the rights on the work for a number of years, after which the work falls into the public domain.

3.1.1. Types of work

Depending on the type of collaboration between the authors when creating the work, we can distinguish between individual, collaborative, and collective works.

An individual work is the creation of just one author who is the only responsible of the work, without any help from others. For example, a paper written by one researcher.

collaborative work is the creation of several authors, where there is not a clear division of the part of the work who can be attributed to each one. For example, a paper written by several researchers in collaboration.

collective work is a work compiled from different works, each one clearly different from the others. In a collective work an editor compiles the parts composing the final work. For example, a book compiled from chapters from different authors.

3.1.2. Duration of rights

The author (or more properly, the owner of the rights) has a monopoly on the work, but this monopoly expires after a period of time. Then, the work falls into the public domain.

The duration of this monopoly period is defined in the IP law. The current standard is 70 years after the death of the last author alive for individual or collaborative works. In the case of collective works, it is 70 years after publication.