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      • If you write a traditional 'scholarly work' (such as a journal article or an academic monograph), you will own the copyright in that work, or will share the copyright with other co-authors or their employers. In some cases the University will own the copyright in the outputs of your research, for example if you create software.
      www.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/ask/copyright/researchers
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  2. Most universities have intellectual property policies defining who owns copyright in certain types of works. These often allow staff and students to assert ownership in scholarly works.

  3. Feb 5, 2024 · Who owns copyright of your work? Any scholarly research outputs made by you, meaning data, thesis or dissertations, are automatically covered by copyright. And you as the author are the copyright owner of that work.

  4. www.lse.ac.uk › library › research-supportCopyright essentials

    Under LSEs Intellectual Property (IP) Policy students own the copyright in their own work, and academic staff own the copyright in both their scholarly work (eg, journal articles, monographs) and teaching materials created whilst working at LSE.

  5. Dec 18, 2023 · Ownership confers control: the owner of copyright is the person or entity who decides who can copy and communicate research in its final, peer-reviewed and tested form, for what purposes and at what cost.

  6. Who owns the copyright to my research publications? You do, at least in most circumstances. This is defined by the UCL IP Policy. Members of staff: the default legal position is that an employer owns any intellectual property rights, including copyright, created by an employee in the course of employment. UCL waives this right in the case of ...

  7. If you write a traditional "scholarly work" (such as a journal article or an academic monograph) you will own the copyright in that work, or will share the copyright with other co-authors or their employers.

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