December 2005

UFVA Fair Use Contest 2.0

University Film and Video Association
Sponsored by the Center for Social Media, School of Communication, American University

UFVA is hosting a contest for the best short documentaries employing fair use, made by higher education students and faculty.

Fair use is the legal use of other people’s copyrighted work without permission or payment—in certain circumstances. Fair use ensures that freedom of speech survives, and that copyright owners don’t become private censors.

The law does not specify exactly what is fair use in order to leave a great deal of flexibility for different creative communities and cultural changes over time. When in doubt, the courts turn to professional and creative practice and understanding. In the past, documentary filmmakers have found that broadcasters and cable casters, lawyers and insurers tell them that fair use is too hard to define, and therefore they cannot invoke it. In response to these restrictive policies, doc filmmakers came together and created a consensus document, The Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use, describing what their professional community deems as acceptable application of fair use. That statement, along with more information, is available at centerforsocialmedia.org/fairuse. Since the release of this Statement in 2005, the industry has seen incredible change—it is now becoming commonplace for doc filmmakers to assert their fair use rights.

Entrants should employ fair use in quoting material in their documentaries, using the Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use as a guide to their decision-making. In addition, entrants must explain what is fair used in their films and why it is fair use under the terms of the statement (see criteria below).

CALL FOR ENTRIES- MAY 1, 2008 DEADLINE (postmark)

ELIGIBILITY:


CRITERIA
PRIZES