Controlled Digital Lending of Library Books in Canada

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Authors

de Castell, Christina
Dickison, Joshua
Mau, Trish
Swartz, Mark
Tiessen, Robert
Wakaruk, Amanda
Winter, Christina

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Partnership: The Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and Research

Abstract

This paper explores legal considerations for how libraries in Canada can lend digital copies of books. It is an adaptation of "A Whitepaper on Controlled Digital Lending of Library Books" by David R. Hansen and Kyle K. Courtney, and draws heavily on this source in its content, with the permission of the authors. Our paper considers the legal and policy rationales for the process—“controlled digital lending”—in Canada, as well as a variety of risk factors and practical considerations that can guide libraries seeking to implement such lending, with the intention of helping Canadian libraries to explore controlled digital lending in our own Canadian legal and policy context. Our goal is to help libraries and their lawyers become better informed about controlled digital lending as an approach, offer the basis of the legal rationale for its use in Canada, and suggest situations in which this rationale might be strongest.

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Keywords

Controlled digital lending, Copyright digital exhaustion, Fair dealing information, Access information policy, Library technological neutrality

Citation

De Castell, C., Dickison, J., Mau, T., Swartz, M., Tiessen, R., Wakaruk, A., & Winter, C. (2022). Controlled Digital Lending of Library Books in Canada. Partnership: The Canadian Journal of Library and Information Practice and Research, 17(2), 1–35. https://doi.org/10.21083/partnership.v17i2.7100

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Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Attribution 3.0 United States