0

I've had an idea stewing around of opening a history blog. I was wondering if I could use academic sources (articles, research,books) for my own articles, provided I would attribute them to the original author in the footnotes.

In other words, would using quotes from said sources be covered by fair use and protect me from copyright issues?

1
  • This is really asking what the law is and not for specific legal advise. It should not be closed. If people are concerned it can be rewritten in third person to be more generic. Commented Jan 2, 2021 at 1:03

1 Answer 1

4

There is no special exemption where academic work is unprotected by copyright. You can quote from academic sources to the same extent that you can copy from non-academic sources, without getting permission. In fact, it is legally impossible to tell if a source of "academic" versus "non-academic". Attribution is not particularly relevant for copyright, what matters is permission (when required). It may be that a copyright holder will grant permission for an extensive quote provided you attribute the source, and it may be that academic publishers or authors are more willing to grant permission than other publishers / authors. On the other hand, many academic works are very expensive, so that distributing the text for free may have more "effect on market", and may result in disinclination to grant permission to quote. On the third hand, such quotes are more likely to be squarely directed at the "commentary" motivation behind fair use law. The point here is that there isn't a special law about just academic sources.

You must log in to answer this question.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged .