Programme Key Speakers (where known) are indicated in bold |
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General Sessions | |
Panel Sessions | |
Keynote Sessions | |
Public Launch | |
Social |
Download the EPIP Conference Companion (PDF format, 4 MB). This brochure includes the full programme, abstracts and practical information for attending EPIP. Delegates will receive a physical copy at registration.
More information about the pre-conference PhD workshop on the ‘Economics of Copyright and the Creative Economy’ is available from this page.
Queries about any aspects of the programme or EPIP organisation may be directed by email to contact@create.ac.uk.
Tuesday, September 1st: Pre-conference PhD Workshop | |
09:30-09:45 | Registration and Coffee |
09:45-10:00 | Introduction to the course |
10:00-10:45 | Copyright and the creative economy: Professor Ruth Towse (CREATe and Bournemouth University) |
10:45-11:30 | Economic theory of copyright: Professor Richard Watt (SERCI and University of Canterbury) |
11:30-11:45 | Coffee Break |
11:45-13:00 | Empirical studies on economic effects of copyright: Professor Paul Heald (University of Illinois); Professor Patrick Waelbroeck (Telecom Paristech) |
13:00-14:00 | Lunch Provided |
14:00-17:00 | Student presentations and discussions: led by Dr Christian Handke (Erasmus University), Dr Kristofer Erickson (University of Glasgow) and Dr Theo Koutmeridis (University of Glasgow) |
17:00-18:00 | Close of Workshop |
19:00-20:00 | Civic Reception at the Invitation of the Lord Provost of Glasgow in the Historic City Chambers Guide to Glasgow City Chambers |
Tuesday, September 1st: EPIP Social Activities and Board Meeting | |
16:30-19:00 | Glasgow Miracle City Walking Tour |
19:00-20:00 | Civic Reception at the Invitation of the Lord Provost of Glasgow in the Historic City Chambers Welcome to Glasgow by Professor Anne H Anderson OBE, FRSE, Vice-Principal & Head of College of Social Sciences, University of Glasgow Guide to Glasgow City Chambers |
20:30-22:00 | EPIP Board Meeting (Venue to be Confirmed) |
Wednesday, September 2nd: EPIP Conference Day 1 | |
08:00-08:30 |
Location: Main Building Forehall
Registration and Coffee |
08:30-08:45 |
Location: Main Building Chapel
Welcome |
Anton Muscatelli, Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Glasgow | |
Kamil Kiljanski, Chief Economist, Directorate-General Internal Market and Industry (DG GROW), European Commission | |
08:45-09:30 |
Location: Main Building Chapel
Opening Keynote |
Ian Hargreaves (Cardiff University, author of Digital Opportunity: A Review of IP and Growth), “Copyright Wars: Frozen Conflict?“ | |
Responding: MEP Julia Reda (Greens/EFA, Pirate Party) | |
09:30-09:45 | Proceed to Adam Smith Building |
09:45-11:15 |
Location: Adam Smith 718
Parallel Session 1A – Patents, Science and Innovation |
Ashish Arora (Duke University), Manuel Gigena (KU Leuven/Louvain), Dennis Verhoeven (KU Leuven/Louvain) and Reinhilde Veugelers (KU Leuven/Louvain), “The Role of Small Firms, Large Firms and Universities in the Creation, Development and Commercialization of Radical Innovation in Biotechnology“ | |
Francesco Lissoni (GREThA – Université de Bordeaux), “Double Disclosures and the Negotiation of Scientific Credit in Research Teams“ | |
Dan Burk (University of California, Irvine), “Patents as Data Aggregators in Personalized Medicine“ | |
Jane Nielsen (University of Tasmania), Dianne Nicol (University of Tasmania), Tess Whitton (University of Tasmania) and John Liddicoat (University of Tasmania), “A Material Imperative: Protecting the Intellectual Outcomes of Research Through Formal Transfer Agreements“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 711
Parallel Session 1B – Geography and Copyright in Europe |
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Giuseppe Mazziotti (Trinity College Dublin), “Is geo-blocking a real cause for concern in Europe?“ | |
Tore Slaatta (University of Oslo), “Differences in copyright institutions and practices in the field of literature in Norway and the Nordicregion“ | |
Bertin Martens (European Commission – Joint Research Centre) and Estrella Gomez Herrera (European Commission – Joint Research Centre), “Language, Copyright and Geographic Segmentation in the EU Digital Single Market for Music and Film“ | |
Raymond Boyle (University of Glasgow), “Copyright, Football and European Media Rights“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 1115
Parallel Session 1C – IP Governance in Europe |
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Benjamin Farrand (University of Strathclyde/University of Warwick), “European Governance and the Role of Ideas: Intellectual Property Lawmaking in the European Union“ | |
Yole Tanghe (KU Leuven/Louvain), “The intersection of Intellectual Property Law and EU ExternalRelations Law in the post-Lisbon era“ | |
Marcella Favale (Bournemouth University), Martin Kretschmer (University of Glasgow) and Paul Torremans (University of Nottingham), “Is There a EU Copyright Jurisprudence? An empirical analysis of the workings of the European Court of Justice“ | |
Sheona Burrow (University of Glasgow), “The IPEC Small Claims Track in England and Wales“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 916
Parallel Session 1D – Data Mining, Automation and Copyright |
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Burkhard Schafer (University of Edinburgh), David Komuves (University of Edinburgh), Jesus Niebla (University of Edinburgh) and Laurence Diver (University of Edinburgh), “A Fourth Law of Robotics? Enforcing Ethical Copyright Compliance in a World Shared with Automata“ | |
Christian Handke (Erasmus University), Lucie Guibault (IViR, University of Amsterdam) and Joan-Josep Vallbé (University of Barcelona), “Is Europe Falling Behind in Data Mining? Copyright’s Impact on Data Mining in Academic Research“ | |
Christian Geib (University of Strathclyde), “Is Licensing the Answer to Existing Copyright Impediments to Data Mining? Different Licensing Models and their Feasibility“ | |
Frank Müller-Langer (MPI for Innovation and Competition) and Richard Watt (University of Canterbury), “How Many More Cites is a $3,000 Open Access Fee Buying You? Empirical Evidence from a Natural Experiment“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 717
Parallel Session 1E – Copyright and Consumers |
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Luis Aguiar (Institute for Prospective Technological Studies) and Joel Waldfogel (University of Minnesota), “Digitization, Copyright, and the Welfare Effects of Music Trade“ | |
Mikko Antikainen (Hanken School of Economics), “Boundaries of private copying in 3D printing“ | |
Joan-Josep Vallbe (University of Barcelona), Balazs Bodo (University of Amsterdam), Joao Quintais (University of Amsterdam) and Christian Handke (Erasmus University), “Knocking on Heaven’s Door – User preferences on digital cultural distribution“ | |
Piers Fleming (University of East Anglia), Melanie Parravano (University of East Anglia) and Daniel John Zizzo (Newcastle University), “Understanding the Determinants of Unlawful File Sharing Behavior: An Experiment“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 706
Parallel Session 1F – International Coordination and Protection |
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Federica Baldan (University of Antwerp) and Esther van Zimmeren (University of Antwerp), “The Future Role of the Unified Patent Court in Safeguarding Judicial Coherence in the European Patent System“ | |
Ana Alba Betancourt (Queen Mary University of London), “Cross-border Patent Disputes: Unified Patent Court or Commercial Arbitration?“ | |
Liguo Zhang (University of Helsinki) and Niklas Bruun (Hanken School of Economics), “Legal Transplant of Intellectual Property Rights in China“ | |
11:15-11:30 |
Location: Adam Smith 915
Coffee Break |
11:30-12:30 |
Location: Adam Smith 1115
Plenary panel – The Role of Disclosure in Patent Systems |
Chair: Stuart Graham (Georgia Tech) | |
Panel:
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12:30-14:00 |
Location: Adam Smith 915
Lunch Break |
14:00-15:00 |
![]() Plenary panel – Measuring the Creative Economy (sponsored by NESTA) Location: Adam Smith 1115
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Chair: Philip Schlesinger (University of Glasgow) | |
Panel:
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15:00-15:15 |
Location: Adam Smith 915
Coffee Break |
15:15-16:45 |
![]() Parallel Session 2A – Innovation and Business Models Location: Adam Smith 706
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Stefan Bechtold (ETH Zurich), Christopher Buccafusco (Chicago-Kent College of Law) and Christopher Sprigman (NYU School of Law), “On the Shoulders of Giants or the Road Less Traveled?: An Experimental Approach to Sequential Innovation in Intellectual Property“ | |
Kris Erickson (University of Glasgow), “Make, Buy or Borrow? Creative industry business models from public domain inputs“ | |
Ruth Towse (CREATe and Bournemouth University), “Copyright and business models in music publishing: the law and the market“ | |
Gillian Doyle (University of Glasgow), “Digitisation and changes in Windowing strategies in the Television Industry“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 1115
Parallel Session 2B – Patents Pre-grant (Examination) |
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Gaetan de Rassenfosse (EPFL), Paul Jensen (University of Melbourne), Beth Webster (Swinburne University of Technology) and Alfons Palangkaraya (Swinburne University of Technology), “Do the Major International Patent Offices Enforce the National Treatment Principle?“ | |
Dietmar Harhoff (Max-Planck Institute Munich), Ilja Rudyk (European Patent Office) and Sebastian Stoll (Max-Planck Institute Munich), “Deferred Patent Examination“ | |
Junbyoung Oh (Inha University) and Yee Kyoung Kim (Korea Institute of S&T Evaluation and Planning), “Quality of Invention or Type II error? Accelerated Examination and Grant Decision of Patent Office“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 718
Parallel Session 2C – Copyright Law |
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Mira T Sundara Rajan (University of Glasgow), “Authorship and Professionalism in the Digital Age: The Economics of Reputation“ | |
Antoni Rubi-Puig (Universitat Pompeu Fabra), “Copyright and Commercial Speech: An Uncharted Relationship“ | |
Tito Rendas (Católica Global School of Law), “Destereotyping the Copyright Wars: The ‘fair use vs. closed list’ debate in the EU“ | |
Robert Ashcroft (PRS for Music) and George Barker (Australian National University), “Is copyright law fit for purpose in the Internet era?“ | |
Location: Adam Smith 711
Parallel Session 2D – International IP and Trade |
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Chenguo Coco Zhang (University of Bremen), “How efficient is the Judicial Enforcement of Patent Law in People’s Republic of China (PRC) to deter Patent Infringement? Insight and Empirical Research based on Data Sets on 648 Patent Infringement Cases before the Beijing Courts 2006 – 2014“ | |
Paul Jensen (University of Melbourne), Alfons Palangkaraya (Swinburne University of Technology) and Beth Webster (Swinburne University of Technology), “The effect of patents on trade“ | |
Edgar Acatitla (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa) and Alenka Guzmán (Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana Iztapalapa), “Factors affecting the diffusion of nanotechnologies as a new technological paradigm across countries. A patent analysis, 1990-2013“ | |
Sunil Kanwar (Delhi School of Economics) and Bronwyn Hall (University of California, Berkeley), “The Market Value of Innovation: The Case of Indian Manufacturing“ | |
![]() Parallel Session 2E – Cultural Goods, Copyright and Digitisation Location: Adam Smith 717
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Oleksandr Bulayenko (CEIPI – Université de Strasbourg), “Mass digitization and making available online of copyrighted works in Europe: Comparison of French and Norwegian approaches“ | |
Maurizio Borghi (Bournemouth University) and Marcella Favale (Bournemouth University), “Crowdsourcing the orphan works problem“ | |
Thomas Margoni (University of Stirling), “The digitisation of cultural heritage: originality, derivative works and (non) original photographs“ | |
Andrea Wallace (University of Glasgow), “Claiming Surrogate IP Rights: When Cultural Institutions Repossess the Public Domain“ | |
16:45-17:00 |
Location: Adam Smith 915
Coffee Break |
17:00-17:45 |
Location: Adam Smith 1115
Day One Closing Keynote |
Petra Moser (New York University), “Copyright and Science: Evidence from the World War II Book Republication Program“ | |
Responding: Lionel Bently (Cambridge University) | |
17:45-18:00 |
Location: Adam Smith 1115
Public Launch of the CREATe Copyright Evidence Wiki (Martin Kretschmer, Theo Koutmeridis, Kris Erickson) |
18:00-18:45 |
Location: Adam Smith 1115
EPIP General Assembly |
19:30-23:30 | Conference Dinner and Cèilidh at Òran Mór |
Thursday, September 3rd: EPIP Conference Day 2 Including SERCI Elements | |
08:00-08:45 |
Location: Main Building Randolph Hall
Tea and Coffee |
08:45-09:45 |
Location: Main Building Senate Room
Invited Panel 1A – A Legal and Empirical Study into the Intellectual Property Implications of 3D Printing and Policy Considerations |
Chair: Lilian Edwards (University of Strathclyde) | |
Panel:
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Location: Main Building Bute Hall
Invited Panel 1B – The Unitary Patent and Unified Patent Court |
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Chair and Introduction: Geertrui Van Overwalle (KU Leuven/Louvain) | |
Panel:
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09:45-10:00 |
Location: Main Building Randolph Hall
Coffee Break |
10:00-11:00 |
Location: Main Building Bute Hall
Invited Panel 2A – IP Governance, Big Data, Data Ownership and Privacy |
Introduction and Chair: Ingrid Schneider (University of Hamburg) | |
Panel:
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![]() Invited Panel 2B – Reconstructing Copyright’s Economic Rights (sponsored by Microsoft) Location: Main Building Senate Room
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Chair: Bernt Hugenholtz (IViR, University of Amsterdam) | |
Panel:
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Responding: Joost Poort (IViR, University of Amsterdam) | |
11:00-12:30 |
Location: Main Building 253
Parallel Session 3A – Dynamics of International Legal Fora |
Paul Torremans (University of Nottingham), “The Unitary Patent and the Unified Patent Court: A View from Private International Law“ | |
Caroline Paunov (OECD), “Corruption’s Asymmetric Impacts on Firm Innovation“ | |
Stefan Bechtold (ETH Zurich) and Jens Frankenreiter (ETH Zurich), “Forum Selling in Germany: Supply-Side Effects in Patent Forum Shopping“ | |
Fabian Gaessler (Max-Planck-Institut for Innovation and Competition), “What to Buy when Forum Shopping – Determinants of Court Selection in Patent Litigation“ | |
Location: Main Building 250
Parallel Session 3B – Economics of Copyright |
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Steven Watson (Lancaster University), Piers Fleming (University of East Anglia) and Daniel Zizzo (Newcastle University), “Perceptions of legal risk do not predict behaviour in unlawful file sharing: An empirical analysis“ | |
Joost Poort (Institute for Information Law, University of Amsterdam) and Nico van Eijk (Institute for Information Law, University of Amsterdam), “Digital Fixation: The Law and Economics of a Fixed e-Book Price“ | |
Hyojung Sun (University of Edinburgh), “Beyond Copyright and the Evolution of Digital Music Services“ | |
Paul Heald (University of Illinois), Martin Kretschmer (University of Glasgow) and Kris Erickson (University of Glasgow), “The Valuation of Unprotected Works: A Case Study of Public Domain Photographs on Wikipedia“ | |
Location: Main Building Senate Room
Parallel Session 3C – Creativity, Re-Use and Copyright |
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Patrick Waelbroeck (Telecom Paristech) and Martin Quinn (Telecom Paristech), “Competing UGCs“ | |
Jessica Silbey (Northeastern University School of Law), “Distribution’s Diversity and Fairer Uses: A Qualitative Analysis of Borrowing Practices in Creative and Innovative Industries“ | |
Christian Katzenbach (Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society) and Lies van Roessel (Humboldt Institute for Internet and Society), “Playing without Rules? Regulating Imitation and Innovation in the Games Industry“ | |
Joe Karaganis (The American Assembly, Columbia University), “Notice and Takedown in the Age of the Robo Notice“ | |
Location: Main Building Melville Room
Parallel Session 3E – Intangibles, Tacit Knowledge and Know-How |
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Per Botolf Maurseth (BI Norwegian Business School) and Roger Svensson (IFN), “Tacit Knowledge and the Dynamics of Inventor Activity“ | |
Russell Thomson (Swinburne University) and Gaetan de Rassenfosse (EPFL), “R&D offshoring and home industry productivity“ | |
Chris Dent (Murdoch University), “Patents, Trade Marks and Know-How: Regulated by Different Contracts and Motivators“ | |
Margo Bagley (University of Virginia), “Towering Wave or Tempest in a Teapot? Synthetic Biology, IP and Economic Development“ | |
12:30-13:30 |
Location: Wellington Church
Joint Lunch with SERCI Delegates (served with SERCI Annual Congress Delegates) |
13:30-14:15 |
Location: Wellington Church
SERCI/EPIP Joint Keynote |
Chair: Ruth Towse (CREATe and Bournemouth University) | |
Richard Watt (SERCI and University of Canterbury), “Copyright Collectives and Contracts: An Economic Theory Perspective“ | |
Responding:
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Delegates for Trade Dress Panel return to Main Building Senate Room – SERCI and other EPIP delegates remain in Wellington Church. | |
14:15-15:15 |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() SERCI/EPIP Joint Plenary panel: Compensating creators Location: Wellington Church
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Chair: Marcel Boyer (Université de Montréal and CIRANO) | |
Panel:
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Location: Main Building Senate Room
EPIP Special invited panel: The use of trade dress provisions under trade mark law and its implications for design, creation and competition in design-intensive industries |
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Chair: Beth Webster (Swinburne University of Technology) | |
Panel:
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15:15-15:30 | Coffee Break (served at both Wellington Church and in the Main Building Randolph Hall) |
15:30-16:30 |
Location: Wellington Church
Parallel Session 4A – SERCI/EPIP Joint Session |
Stan Liebowitz (University of Texas at Dallas), “Paradise lost: Copyright for British authors in 19th C. America“ | |
Christopher Buccafusco (Chicago-Kent College of Law) and Paul Heald (University of Illinois), “Two Views for the Steeple: Testing Porn Exceptionalism in Trademark and Copyright Tarnishment Claims“ | |
Location: Main Building 250
Parallel Session 4B – Geographical Indications and Regions |
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Peter Drahos (Australian National University), “Australia’s Regions and Agriculture: Can Geographical Indications Help?“ | |
Nicola Searle (Goldsmiths, University of London), “The Economics of Geographical Indications: Making Culture Tangible“ | |
Hazel Moir (Australian National University), “Geographic Indications: heritage or terroir?“ | |
Location: Main Building Melville Room
Parallel Session 4C – Patent Value and Costs |
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Federico Munari (University of Bologna) and Azzurra Meoli (University of Bologna), “The Patent Paradox in Crowdfunding. An empirical analysis based on Kickstarter data“ | |
Jussi Heikkilä (University of Jyvaskyla), “The relationship between first and second tier patent protection: The case of the Dutch short-term patent system abolition“ | |
Mark James Thompson (Swiss Federal Institute of Intellectual Property), “The Cost of Patent Protection: Renewal Propensity“ | |
Location: Main Building Senate Room
Parallel Session 4D – Technology, R&D and Patents |
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Georg von Graevenitz (Queen Mary University of London), Bronwyn Hall (University of California, Berkeley) and Christian Helmers (Santa Clara University), “Technology Entry in the Presence of Patent Thickets“ | |
Emilio Raiteri (EPFL), “More of the same or something different? Technological originality and novelty in public procurement-related patents“ | |
Riccardo Cappelli (University of Bologna), Marco Corsino (University of Bologna) and Salvatore Torrisi (University of Bologna), “Patent strategies: protecting innovation, preempting competition and defending the freedom to operate“ | |
Location: Main Building 253
Parallel Session 4E – Innovation Behaviour of Firms |
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Irene Calboli (Singapore Management University/Texas A&M University School of Law) and Dan Hunter (Swinburne University of Technology Law School), “Trademark Proliferation“ | |
Henning Berthold (University of St Andrews) and Barbara Townley (University of St Andrews), “Innovation and IP: A Dialectical View“ | |
Cecilie Bryld Fjællegaard (Copenhagen Business School), Karin Beukel (University of Copenhagen) and Lars Alkaersig (Technical University of Denmark), “Designers as Determinant for Aesthetic Innovations“ | |
Parallel Session 4F – Standards, Interoperability and IP |
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Florian Ramel (Technische Universität Berlin) and Knut Blind (Technische Universität Berlin), “The Influence of Standard Essential Patents on Trade“ | |
Rudi Bekkers (Eindhoven University of Technology) and Arianna Martinelli (CNR-IBINET and Scuola superiore Sant’Anna), “The causal effect of including standards-related documentation into prior art: evidence from a recent EPO policy change“ | |
Sally Weston (Bournemouth University), “Encouraging interoperability by the sharing of interface information obtained by reverse engineering“ | |
16:30-16:45 |
Location: Main Building Randolph Hall
Coffee Break |
16:45-17:30 |
Location: Main Building Bute Hall
Plenary panel – Access to Data (with chief economists) |
Chair: Tony Clayton (Imperial College London) | |
Panel Keynote: Joel Waldfogel (University of Minnesota), “Data Needs for Assessing the Function of Copyright“ | |
Responding:
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17:30-18:00 |
Location: Main Building Bute Hall
Closing Keynote |
Pamela Samuelson (University of California, Berkeley), “Evidence-based IP Policy-making: What’s that?” | |
18:00 |
Location: Main Building Bute Hall
Conference closure |
Beth Webster (Swinburne University of Technology) A Preview of EPIP 2016 (Oxford, 3-5 September 2016) |
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Rick Rylance, CEO Arts & Humanities Research Council, and chair Research Councils UK |