Professor Michael D. Birnhack, Professor of Law, Tel-Aviv University, Israel, published a study titled “Colonial Copyright: Intellectual Property in Mandate Palestine”. The study talked about copyright in the British Mandate period in Palestine, and it defined the concept of the copyright, its uses, its objectives in the first place, and its role in the economy. In his research, the writer explained the privacy of the use of the copyright by the British colonizer in Palestine and the manner in which its law was imposed in a manner that suits the local conditions of the assigned population and received them accordingly. The book discussed how nationality played the differential role of the use of the copyright, and the difference in use between Jews and indigenous people – Arabs – as each of them used it to serve their interests, according to the author. The writer also talked about the national, cultural, and religious role of the brand during the mandate period. To check the news, click here