Digital copyright and disability discrimination: From braille books to bookshare
Keywords
220104 Human Rights and Justice Issues180115 Intellectual Property Law
copyright access accessibility blind print disability human rights disability discrimination
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http://eprints.qut.edu.au/13337/Abstract
In Australia, blind people are able to access texts in braille and books on tape, but the demand for these media is decreasing. Blind people today are increasingly reliant on texts in electronic form, and these are much less readily available in Australia. Electronic texts are more portable and less cumbersome than large braille volumes, and are much faster to navigate than audio recordings. However, in Australia it is difficult for blind people to get access to a wide range of electronic texts and there exists no scheme enabling such access. At the same time sighted people are using electronic text and other digital media at an ever-increasing rate. In order to approximate the same level of access as sighted people, blind people require access to accessible electronic versions of all published material. The authors suggest that given the legal imperatives of Australia’s domestic legislation, treaty obligations and social values, that there exists a moral imperative to create a scheme providing blind people with access to digital print media.Date
2008-05Type
Journal ArticleIdentifier
oai:eprints.qut.edu.au:13337http://eprints.qut.edu.au/13337/