Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The droit de suite was first proposed in Europe around 1893, in response to a decrease in the importance of the salon, the end of the private patron, and to champion the cause of the "starving artist". [1] Many artists, and their families, had suffered from the war, and droit de suite was a means to remedy socially difficult situations. [2]
The droit de suite is an inalienable right of the artist, and may not be transferred except to heirs on death, nor waived even in advance [Arts. 1(1), 6(1)]. Member States may provide for the optional or compulsory collective management by collecting societies [Art. 6(2)].
Due to the film's controversial subject matter, seven or eight local French councils refused to allow the film crew to film on their territory. Kassovitz was forced to temporarily rename the script Droit de Cité (city of freedom). [7] Some of the actors were not professionals and the film includes many situations that were based on real events ...
De l’influence de la révolution d’Amérique sur l’Europe. 1786; Vie de Monsieur Turgot. Londres, 1786; Réflexions d'un citoyen, sur la révolution de 1788. Londres, 1788; Sur le choix des ministres, 1789; Au corps électoral sur Esclavage des Noirs. 1789; Déclaration des droits. 1789; Sur l’admission des femmes au droit de cité. 1790
Droit du seigneur [a] ('right of the lord'), also known as jus primae noctis [b] ('right of the first night'), sometimes referred to as prima nocta [c], was a supposed legal right in medieval Europe, allowing feudal lords to have sexual relations with any female subject, particularly on her wedding night.
The term droit is also used in various legal connexions (i.e., French law), such as the droit of angary, the droit d'achat (right of pre-emption) in the case of contraband, the feudal droit de bris (see wreck), the droit de regale or ancient royal privilege of claiming the revenues and patronage of a vacant bishopric, and the feudal droites of ...
The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (French: Déclaration des droits de l'Homme et du citoyen de 1789), set by France's National Constituent Assembly in 1789, is a human and civil rights document from the French Revolution; the French title can also be translated in the modern era as "Declaration of Human and Civic Rights".
French droit d’auteur is defined in the first book of the Code of intellectual property. A good introduction is Droits d’auteur et droits voisins by Xavier Linant de Bellefonds, Dalloz, 200h 2, 2247047408.