Checklist for Fair Use:
Prepared by
IUPUI Copyright Management Center
Kenneth D. Crews, Associate Dean of the Faculties for Copyright Management
Indiana University Purdue University Indianapolis
530 West New York Street
Indianapolis, Indiana 46202
Voice: 317-274-4400 Fax: 317-278-3326
http://www.copyright.iupui.edu
We are pleased to offer the following “Checklist
for Fair Use” as a helpful tool for the academic community. We
hope that it will serve two purposes. First, it should help educators,
librarians, and others to focus on factual circumstances that are important
to the evaluation of a contemplated fair use of copyrighted works. A
reasonable fair-use analysis is based on four factors set forth in the
fair-use provision of copyright law, Section 107 of the Copyright Act
of 1976. The application of those factors depends on the particular
facts of your situation, and changing one or more facts may alter the
outcome of the analysis. The “Checklist for Fair Use” derives
from those four factors and from the judicial decisions interpreting
copyright law.
A second purpose of the checklist is to provide an important
means for recording your decision-making process. Maintaining a record
of your fair-use analysis is critical to establishing your “reasonable
and good-faith” attempts to apply fair use to meet your educational
objectives. Section
504 (c)(2) of the Copyright Act offers some protection for educators
and librarians who act in good faith. Once you have completed your application
of fair use to a particular need, keep your completed checklist in your
files for future reference.
As you use the checklist and apply it to your situation,
you are likely to check more than one box in each column and even check
boxes across columns. Some checked boxes will “favor fair use,”
and others may “oppose fair use.” A key concern is whether
you are acting reasonably in checking any given box; the ultimate concern
is whether the cumulative “weight” of the factors favors
or opposes fair use. Because you are most familiar with your project,
you are probably best positioned to make that decision.
To learn more about fair use and other aspects of copyright
law, visit the Copyright Management Center website at http://www.copyright.iupui.edu.
Revised: April 1, 2004
Copyright 2004-2005, Indiana University
Thanks to Dwayne K. Buttler, now at the University of
Louisville, for his assistance with creating the checklist.
Back to Checklist for Fair Use
Added to Website: Janaury 21, 2005