WORLD BOOK AND COPYRIGHT DAY ACKNOWLEDGES INTELLECTUAL, ARTISTIC PROPERTY HAS RIGHT TO PROTECTION SAYS GENERAL ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT
GA/SM/241
OBV/207
23 April 2001
WORLD BOOK AND PROPERTY DAY ACKNOWLEDGES INTELLECTUAL, ARTISTIC PROPERTY
HAS RIGHT TO PROTECTION SAYS GENERAL ASSEMBLY PRESIDENT
Following is the message of General Assembly President Harri Holkeri (Finland) on the occasion of World Book and Copyright Day, which is observed 23 April:
Through the observance of World Book and Copyright Day, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) promotes reading and publishing, as well as the need to protect intellectual property through copyright. The Day also commemorates the work of three great writers -- Miguel de Cervantes, William Shakespeare and Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, all of whom passed away on this date, 23 April, in 1616.
Books have always been the most universal way of transmitting and preserving knowledge. But, because of the frequently high cost of printing and publishing, books are not always accessible to all readers. Today's electronic revolution has not yet replaced the need for well-supplied public libraries and other similar sources to enable readers and students to have access to needed material.
Whether writing science or fiction, a writer’s work is an expression of his or her creative abilities, as well as his or her knowledge. Copyright is recognition that the work of a writer is unique and valuable to all. And this Day provides an occasion to acknowledge that both intellectual and artistic property has the right to be protected. It is also a way to help foster, through books, the expression of our cultural and intellectual diversity, thus ensuring that our reading experience will continue to be rewarding.
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