Legal deposit
Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience
Legal deposit is a rule that says people or groups must give copies of their publications to a special place, usually a national library. The number of copies needed depends on the country. Sometimes, even governments have to give copies of their important papers to libraries so everyone can see them. This helps keep a country’s history of books and information safe for the future.
Rules about legal deposit are different in each country. Some are part of the rules about copying things, while others have their own special laws. For a long time, only printed books and movies were included. But now, most countries also include digital, or computer-based, documents. In 2000, UNESCO helped countries update their rules to include these new kinds of materials.
By country
Albania
In Albania, a law says that publishers of printed books, brochures, posters, postal cards, maps, geographic atlases, and musical and choreographical scores must send five copies to the National Library of Albania, the Library of the Albanian Parliament, and the local public library where the publisher operates. Each new printing must follow the same rules.
Australia
In Australia, a law says that a copy of all materials published in Australia must be sent to the National Library of Australia. State laws say that books and other materials published in each state must be sent to the state library. Some states also require books to be sent to the library of the state parliament or the University of Sydney library.
Brazil
In Brazil, laws say that one copy of every book, music, or periodical published in the country must be sent to the National Library of Brazil in Rio de Janeiro.
Brunei
In Brunei, three copies of every book, report, pamphlet, periodical, newspaper, sheet of letterpress, sheet of music, map, plan, chart, or table published must be sent to the Director of Museums within one month after publication.
Canada
In Canada, a law says that up to two copies of any published material must be sent to Library and Archives Canada. The province of Quebec also requires two copies of any document to be sent to Bibliothèque et Archives nationales du Québec within seven days of publication.
China
In China, a regulation says that three copies of each printed publication should be sent to the National Library of China, one copy to the Archives Library of Chinese Publications, and one copy to the administrative department for publication under the State Council.
Colombia
In Colombia, laws say that creators of printed works, as well as audiovisual, audio, and video productions, must supply the National Library of Colombia with a certain number of copies of the works, whether produced within Colombia or imported.
Costa Rica
The National Library of Costa Rica is required by law to hold three copies of every publication in the country.
Croatia
In Croatia, a law says that publishers must supply nine copies of publications. Two copies go to the National and University Library in Zagreb, while university and scientific libraries in several cities each receive one copy.
Denmark
In Denmark, a law says that two copies of most written works, newspapers, audio, and video must be sent to the Royal Danish Library and the State and University Library.
Faroe Islands
A law requires four copies of every publication to be sent to the National Library of the Faroe Islands.
Finland
In Finland, a law says that copies of all works published in the country must be sent to several libraries, including the National Library of Finland and the National Audiovisual Institute. This includes works in digital format.
France
In France, a law from 1537 says that a copy of any published book must be sent to the king's library for conservation. The main depository is the Bibliothèque nationale de France. Legal deposit includes printed material, multimedia archives, and some web pages.
Germany
In Germany, laws say that publishing houses must send copies of print and some non-print publications to the German National Library in Frankfurt am Main or Leipzig. Each federal state also requires copies to be sent to the respective state repository.
Hong Kong
In Hong Kong, a law says that publishers must send five copies of a new book to the Secretary for Broadcasting, Culture and Sport within one month after publication. One copy is sent to the City Hall Library.
Hungary
Iceland
In Iceland, four copies of any published printed material must be sent to the National and University Library of Iceland in Reykjavik. If fewer than 50 copies are made, only two are required.
India
A law enacted by the Indian parliament says that books published in India must be sent to the National Library of India and three other libraries. The law was amended to include periodicals and newspapers.
Ireland
In Ireland, one copy of each book and periodical published must be sent to the National Library of Ireland, the British Library, and several university libraries. Additional British libraries can request a copy within a year.
Israel
In Israel, a law says that two copies of each publication must be sent to the National Library of Israel. The library of the Knesset and the Israel State Archive can each receive one copy upon request.
Italy
In Italy, a law says that a copy of each publication must be sent to the National Central Library of Florence and the National Central Library of Rome. Additional copies go to regional and provincial libraries.
Japan
In Japan, laws say the requirements for submitting copies of various materials to the National Diet Library, depending on whether the publisher is governmental or nongovernmental and whether the work is physical or online.
Kenya
In Kenya, a law covers the deposit of books and newspapers. Publishers must deposit two copies with the Director of the Kenya National Library Service and up to three copies to the Registrar of Books and Newspapers.
Liechtenstein
The Liechtenstein State Library, established by law in 1961, collects print materials, pictures, and music created by citizens of Liechtenstein and items related to Liechtenstein. It also serves as a patent library.
Macau
A decree says that copies of works published in Macau must be sent to the Macao Central Library.
Malaysia
In Malaysia, a law says that five copies of printed library materials and two copies of non-printed library materials must be sent to the National Library of Malaysia.
Mexico
In Mexico, a law says that two copies of each physical book, publication, magazine, newspaper, map, brochure, poster, music sheet, record, movie, or photograph published must be sent to several libraries, or one copy if in electronic or digital format.
Monaco
In Monaco, four copies of locally produced books, computer software, and media must be sent to the Bibliothèque Louis Notari. If fewer than 100 copies were produced, only two copies are required.
New Zealand
In New Zealand, a law says that copies of all printed documents and offline electronic documents must be sent to the National Library of New Zealand within 20 working days of publication. The National Librarian can also make copies of Internet documents.
Norway
In Norway, a law says that publications, regardless of format, must be sent to the National Library of Norway.
Poland
In Poland, laws say that copies of publications must be sent to several libraries, including the National Library of Poland and the Jagiellonian Library. The number of copies depends on the print run and type of publication.
Portugal
In Portugal, publishers must deposit 11 copies of all publications with various libraries, including the National Library of Portugal. Exceptions include Masters and PhD dissertations, limited prints, stamps, plans, and posters, for which only one copy is required.
Romania
In Romania, publishers must deposit copies of publications at the National Library of Romania. The number of copies required varies by type of publication.
Russia
In Russia, several libraries, including the Russian State Library and the National Library of Russia, are entitled to receive a copy of every book published.
Singapore
In Singapore, a law says that all publishers must deposit two copies of every publication with the National Library Board within four weeks from the publication date.
Slovenia
The National and University Library of Slovenia, originally the Lyceum Library of Ljubljana, has collected legal deposit copies since 1807. It now also serves the needs of the University of Ljubljana and collects deposits from the entire Kingdom of Yugoslavia.
South Africa
In South Africa, a law says that publishers must provide five copies of every book published if the print run consists of 100 or more copies. These copies are sent to several libraries. If the print run is less than 100 copies, only one copy is required.
South Korea
A law says that one or two copies of any tangible material published or produced in the country must be sent to the National Library of Korea within 30 days for preservation. Copies of online materials must be submitted on demand.
Spain
In Spain, laws say that the deposit of copies of printed materials to the National Library of Spain and other libraries is required. This includes books, magazines, sound recordings, maps, movies, and postcards. The number of copies varies by type of material.
Sri Lanka
In Sri Lanka, a law says that a copy of every document printed in the country must be deposited in legal deposit libraries, including the National Archives of Sri Lanka and the National Library of Sri Lanka.
Sweden
In Sweden, a law says that copies of printed material, sound, and moving images must be sent to The National Library of Sweden and Lund University Library. A 2012 law also says that digitally published content must be sent to the National Library starting in 2015.
Switzerland
In Switzerland, there is no federal law for legal deposit, but some cantons have laws requiring books published within their jurisdictions to be deposited. The Swiss National Library also receives copies through voluntary agreements with publishers' associations.
Taiwan
In Taiwan, a law says that a copy of a work must be deposited with the National Central Library and the Parliamentary Library of the Legislative Yuan. Two university libraries are also selected as legal deposit destinations.
United Kingdom
In the United Kingdom, six legal deposit libraries include the British Library, the National Library of Scotland, the National Library of Wales, the Bodleian Library at Oxford University, Cambridge University Library, and Trinity College Dublin Library. A law says that one copy of every book published must be sent to the British Library. Other libraries can request a free copy within one year of publication. The law also covers non-print works published online or offline.
United States
In the United States, a law says that any copyrighted and published work must be submitted in two copies to the United States Copyright Office at the Library of Congress. The Library of Congress does not retain all works. Another type of depository library in the United States are federal depository libraries, which receive free copies of all materials published by the Government Publishing Office.
Related articles
This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Legal deposit, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.
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