Abstract
Abstract In Australia, as in Britain, the need to comply with the Berne Convention has been the main motivating force in the introduction of moral rights. Further rationales have been scantily articulated, though perhaps Lord Mansfield’s words ‘because it is just’ come closest to describing the recent Australian rhetoric on moral rights protection. It is scarcely possible to speak of any theoretical development of the rights in Australia, with civil law influences seeming distant in this country and the rights being too new to have attracted much judicial comment.
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