Moral Rights under Copyright Law
The Concept of Moral Rights Copyright is a bundle of rights that is primarily an economic right. What happens after you have assigned, either wholly or partially, the copyright in your work to someone else? Does that mean you have lost all your rights in the work that you have created or still have some form of ownership in it? The answer to this predicament lies in the concept of ‘Moral Rights.’ It means that even after the ownership in work has been transferred or assigned, you have the right to claim authorship of the work and retain the work’s integrity. Moral rights are the English translation of the French term ‘Droit Moral.’ Moral rights differ from copyright. Copyright protects property rights, which entitles authors to publish and economically benefit from their published works. On the other hand, moral rights protect personal and reputational rights, which allow authors to defend both the integrity of their works and the use of their names. In jurisdictions that legally recognize moral rights, authors have redress to protect any distortion, misrepresentation, or interference of their works that could negatively affect their honor. Moral rights are often described as ‘inalienable.’
Foundational Basis