One of the more interesting panels at the Association for Asian Studies meeting Chicago was the Japan Image Use Protocol Guide workshop. This was organized by the North American Coordinating Council on Japanese Library Resources.
Basically, the Image Use Protocol Guide is designed to help academic authors and publishers navigate the somewhat circuitous path to getting image use rights from Japanese copyright holders. The most useful portion for me is the Permission Request Templates that you can use to send to image rights holders (museums, publishers, etc.) asking for permission to reprint photographs in your papers and monographs.
The protocol guide is still in the beta stage and they are asking for comments:
http://www.fas.harvard.edu/~ncc/imageuse/index.html
My main comment would be that the current guide is mainly oriented towards historians and other scholars in the humanities as it only covers image reduplication rights and doesn't address the question of ethics and legal issues involved in taking and printing images of people in Japan. For example, what moral rights or implicit copyrights are retained by the people in the photographs we take?
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