International Publishers Association
The International Publishers Association is an international publishing industry federation of national publisher associations representing book and journal publishing. It is a non-profit and non-governmental organization, founded in 1896 to promote and protect publishing and to raise awareness for publishing in the context of economic, cultural and political development. The IPA actively opposes censorship and promotes copyright, literacy and the freedom to publish, and represents the interests of the publishing industry at international level.
History
Founded in 1896 in Paris, France, by the leading publishers at that time the initial aim of the IPA was to ensure that countries throughout the world adopted copyright law and implemented the then new international copyright treaty, the 1886 Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works.The IPA, active mostly in Europe during its first century, provided a platform for national publishers to voice their concerns for future important issues. From its first year, IPA members called to countries to eliminate custom duties to intellectual products, and the tenth Congress in 1933 dealt for the first time with book fairs.
In 1962, the IPA’s headquarters moved from Zurich to Geneva. In the same year, at the Barcelona Congress, regular connections with UNESCO were established.
The promotion of copyright remains one of the IPA's main objectives. Since its establishment the IPA also promotes and defends the freedom to publish, which it describes as a "fundamental aspect of the human right to freedom of expression. As an industry association IPA continues to deal with a range of issues affecting publishers, such as book fairs, standards, piracy, literacy, textbook procurement policy, collective licensing, VAT, professional training, and promotion of reading. The IPA also functions as a meeting place for publishers to network and conduct business.
Membership
The IPA is a federation of national, regional and specialist publishers' associations. The IPA has more than 60 organisational members from more than 50 countries in Africa, Asia, Australia, Europe and the Americas. It has consultative status as non-governmental organisation at the United Nations.Committees
- Copyright Committee
- Freedom to Publish Committee
- Literacy & Book Industry Policy Committee
- International Education Publishers Forum
Governing Bodies
The President is elected by the General Assembly and has a term of two years. He or she is the head of the General Assembly and the Executive Committee. The Executive committee formulates plans and policies for the General Assembly to discuss and vote on. The IPA also elects two Vice Presidents and regional representatives. A Secretary General acts as the chief operating officer.
The President for 2019-2021 is Hugo Setzer, and the Vice President is Bodour Al Qasimi. The current Secretary General is José Borghino.
List of IPA Presidents
- 1962-1966: Santiago Salvat Espasa
- 1980-1984: Manuel Salvat Dalmau
- 1988-1992: Andrew Neilly
- 1992-1996: Fernando Guedes
- 1996-2000: Alan Gründ
- 2000-2004: Pere Vicens
- 2004-2008: Ana Maria Cabanellas
- 2009-2010: Herman P. Spruijt
- 2011-2014: Youngsuk “Y.S.” Chi
- 2015-2017: Richard Charkin
- 2017-2019: Dr Michiel Kolman
- 2019-2021: Hugo Setzer
- 2021-2023: Bodour Al Qasimi
Associated organizations
IPA also has regular connections with industry and regulatory organizations. These include national publisher associations, organizations representing special consumer interests, and reproduction rights organizations which essentially collect license fees for rights holders. For example, IPA is an associate member of the International Federation for Reproduction Rights Organizations and since 2004, represents publisher interests on the IFRRO Board. It is also a member of International Standard organizations EDItEUR and International ISBN Agency.
Congress
IPA organizes a Publishers Congress every four years, starting from 1896 in Paris, France, where publishers fully and openly discuss relevant, basic, and long-term industry problems and challenges.2008 Publishers Congress, Seoul
The 28th Congress attracted nearly 700 participants form over 45 countries. In its resolution, the Congress expressed the need for reform in the freedom to publish in Burma/Myanmar, China, Iran, and Vietnam, calling for the immediate release of Publishers, writers, journalists and bloggers in prison or under house arrest for having exercised their rights to freedom of expression.Copyright Symposiums
The IPA host a Copyright Symposium every four years. The first Copyright Symposium was held in 1986, Heidelberg, Germany, to mark the centenary of the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works. The Copyright Symposia are held in partnership with IPA member organisations.7th Copyright Symposium 2010, Abu Dhabi
From 28 February to 1 March 2010 Abu Dhabi hosted the 7th Copyright Symposium 2010, held for the first time in the Arab world. Attended by 270 delegates from 53 countries, the two-day symposium was attended by government officials, legal experts, publishers and authors. Plenary speeches and seminars covered topics such as copyright and Islamic law, publishing in the internet age, collective licensing, the digital market place, global copyright trends and the future of copyright in emerging markets. The symposium was held immediately before the Abu Dhabi International Book Fair, 2 to 7 March.Freedom to Publish
One of the IPA's main goals is to protect the right of publishers to produce and distribute the materials they choose to. In other words, to protect their basic human right to freedom of expression. The IPA bases its beliefs on the following human rights standards:- Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights
- Article 19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights
- Article 10 of the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms
The IPA began working with IFEX in 2004. IFEX was established in 1992 to combat all the offenses that were taking place against freedom of expression. It has 81 member organizations and monitors and reports violations using an Action Alert Network. This network allows members throughout the world to campaign against violations using tools such as letter writing campaigns, media coverage, and awareness-raising events. Many of the organizations' actions are focused on freeing imprisoned journalists and keeping journalists around the world safe.
Freedom to Publish Freedom Prize
The IPA awards the IPA Freedom to Publish Prize annually since 2005, to honour a person or an organization anywhere in the world that has defended and promoted the freedom publish with courage. It consists of a monetary award and a certificate. The list of past winners is as follows.- 2018 Gui Minhai
- 2016 Raif Badawi Saudi Arabia.
- 2014 Ihar Lohvinau Belarus.
- 2012 Jonathan "Zapiro" Shapiro
- 2011 Bui Chat
- 2010 Israpil Shovkhalov and Viktor Kogan-Yasny Special Award to Irfan Sanci
- 2009 Sihem Bensedrine, Neziha Rjiba and Mohamed Talbi
- 2008 Ragıp Zarakolu
- 2007 Trevor Ncube, Special Award to Anna Politkovskaya and Hrant Dink
- 2006 Shalah Lahiji
Prohibition of Religious Defamation
In 2008 the IPA adopted a resolution against prohibiting religious defamation, in light of the UN Ad Hoc Committee session on complementary Standards called at the initiative of the Organization of the Islamic Conference. Later in 2009 the forum passed a resolution condemning religious defamation as a human rights violation, also noting that “Islam is frequently and wrongly associated with human rights violation and terrorism.” In a 2010 Press Release, the IPA stated that “Human Rights protect individual human beings, not institutions or religions. Criticism of religions and religious practices must be allowed, inparticular when religions are viewed from a political point of view. As organizations representing writers, artists and journalists of all faiths and none, we warn against any regulations prohibiting criticism of any religion or any set of ideas.”
Copyright
Google Books Project
In 2005 IPA issued a joint statement with PEN USA on the Google Books Project. The statement raised concerns that Google is disregarding the rights of authors and is infringing copyright law. In the statement the two organisations asserts the rights of an author to determine whether their work will be available in a digital format. The statement raises the concern that once materials are available digitally it is hard to monitor how many copies are produced, which is an infringement of copyright legislation. The IPA and PEN USA call for Google to obtain author permission before making works available in the Google Print Library Project. They also wish for Google to work more closely with authors to make sure that authors’ rights are not violated.World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO)
World Blind Union (WBU)
The IPA collaborates closely with the World Blind Union and other interests of persons with print disabilities. Since 2009 WBU, among other related organizations, and rights holder organizations such as IPA have discussed in the WIPO Stakeholder Platform to discuss without the interference of international organization politics. Since March 2011 the collaboration in this forum is suspended.Folklore Protection
Protecting Traditional Knowledge and Expression of Folklore may be a concern for Publishers that publish fairy tales and traditional stories, school books with reference to local customs, or related scientific journal articles. There have been several international efforts for special protection of traditional folklore, notably by WIPO and UNESCO. Currently, IPA participates in discussions through WIPO’s program for traditional cultural expressions. IPA tries to make sure the rights of freedom of expression and publisher’s positive impact relating to such cultural material are not threatened.Industry Policy
World Book Capital Cities
IPA proposed the idea of nominating one city a year as a World Book Capital, under which cities must promote books and foster books through various events, while conforming to the principles of freedom of expression, freedom to publish and to disseminate information. The title enables the promotion and communication of the winning city and is also a symbolic achievement. A nominating committee decides on the city each year. Following Madrid, Alexandria, and New Delhi, the current and past capitals are as follows.2004: Antwerp ; 2005: Montreal ; 2006: Turin ; 2007: Bogotá ; 2008: Amsterdam ; 2009: Beirut ; 2010: Ljubljana ; 2011: Buenos Aires ; 2012: Yerevan.