Publishers and Authors File Suit against Treasury Department; Seek to Roll Back Restrictions on Publishing Authors from Embargoed Countries.NEW YORK -- Calling the Treasury Department's continued attempts to exert control over publishing activities involving information and literature from countries under U.S. trade embargo a violation of the essential right of all Americans to learn about the world, a coalition including leading publishers and authors associations filed suit today against Treasury's Office of Foreign Assets Control The Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) is an agency of the United States Department of the Treasury under the auspices of the Under Secretary of the Treasury for Terrorism and Financial Intelligence. OFAC administers and enforces economic and trade sanctions based on U. (OFAC OFAC Office of Foreign Assets Control (US Treasury) OFAC Ontario Farm Animal Council (Canada) OFAC Olmsted Falls Airport Committee OFAC Organic Fertilizer Association of California ) in federal court in New York. The Association of American Publishers (body, publication) Association of American Publishers - (AAP) A group engaged in standardisation efforts in document preparation. Professional and Scholarly Publishing division (AAP/PSP), the Association of American University Presses The Association of American University Presses (or AAUP) is an association of mostly, but not exclusively, North American university presses, with 129 member publishers as of 2005. External links
abbr. American Association of University Professors AAUP n abbr (= American Association of University Professors) → asociación de profesores universitarios AAUP ), PEN American Center PEN American Center (PEN), founded in 1922 and based in New York City, works to advance literature, to defend free expression, and to foster international literary fellowship. The Center has a membership of 3,300 writers, editors, and translators. (PEN), and Arcade Publishing are asking the court to strike down OFAC regulations that require publishers and authors to seek a license from the government to perform the routine activities necessary to publish foreign literature from embargoed countries such as Iran, Cuba, and Sudan in the United States. Representatives of the plaintiffs' organizations expressed frustration over a series of OFAC rulings that have created uncertainty and confusion among publishers fearful of incurring prison sentences of up to 10 years or fines of up to $1,000,000 per violation. Those rulings and the regulations they interpret mandate that Americans (1) may not enter into transactions for works not yet fully completed, (2) may not provide "substantive or artistic alterations or enhancements" to the works, and (3) may not promote or market either new or previously existing works from the affected countries. The group challenges the regulations on the grounds that they violate the Trading with the Enemy Act The Trading with the Enemy Act, sometimes abbreviated as TWEA, is a United States federal law, , was enacted in 1917 to restrict trade with countries hostile to the United States. The law gives the President the power to oversee or restrict any and all trade between the U.S. (TWEA TWEA Trading with the Enemy Act TWEA Time Warner Entertainment Australia PTY Limited ), the International Emergency Economic Powers Act The International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) is a United States federal law allowing U.S. Presidents to identify any unusual extraordinary threat that originates outside the United States and to confiscate property and prohibit transactions in response. (IEEPA IEEPA International Emergency Economic Powers Act ) and the First Amendment. TWEA and IEEPA were twice amended by Congress, in the Berman Amendment and the Free Trade In Ideas Amendment, to make clear that the statutes exempt transactions involving "information and informational materials" from trade embargoes. The AAP/PSP, AAUP, PEN, and Arcade contend that OFAC's regulations directly contradict the statutes that authorize trade sanctions and endanger publishers, authors and the public's constitutional rights. "Our most basic liberties are violated when we, as publishers, have to either ask the government for permission to publish, or risk serious criminal and civil penalties if we do not obtain permission," said Marc Brodsky, chairman of the AAP/PSP and executive director of the American Institute of Physics The American Institute of Physics (AIP) is a professional body representing American physicists and publishing physics related journals. It was founded in 1931. The aims of the organization are: "promoting the advancement and diffusion of the knowledge of physics and its . "How can the United States uphold our position as a beacon for the free exchange of ideas and science if we ourselves censor authors because of where they live?" Mr. Brodsky continued. "The OFAC regulations are arbitrary and counterproductive," added PEN American Center president Salman Rushdie. "For example, OFAC says publishers are free to publish 'pre-existing' texts from these countries. Yet the countries currently under U.S. trade embargo routinely prevent important work by writers and scholars from seeing the light of day. American writers and publishers are being told that unless they get a license from OFAC, they may not work with their censored colleagues in these countries to bring their works into print." "It is quite troubling that we will be risking criminal penalties if we proceed with the publication of The PEN Anthology of Contemporary Iranian Literature, which will present works created by Iranian writers, poets, and critics since the Iranian Revolution that expose the turmoil and repression of recent years," said Dick Seaver of Arcade Publishing. "Some of the work can't be published in Iran because of government censorship there. If publication is blocked by government interference here, what's the functional difference between Iran's censorship and ours?" "This is not a hypothetical situation--these rulings are already having a chilling effect," said Peter Givler, executive director of AAUP. "For example, one of our members, The University of Alabama Press The University of Alabama Press is a university press that is part of the University of Alabama. External link
Since the effect of these OFAC regulations became clear late in 2003, publishers, authors, and public interest groups have pursued a number of paths to making OFAC enforcement consistent with the protection for "information and informational materials" mandated by Congress in the Berman Amendment and the Free Trade In Ideas Amendment. "We have decided to pursue the legal challenge because our efforts have not yet yielded a resolution that is satisfactory on either the law or the principle," explained Mr. Brodsky. Edward Davis and Linda Steinman of the New York office of Davis Wright Tremaine Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view. Mark blatant advertising for , using . are lead counsel for the plaintiffs. Marjorie Heins of the Brennan Center for Justice The Brennan Center for Justice at New York University Law School is a progressive, non-partisan public policy and law institute that focuses on issues involving democracy and justice. at NYU and law professor Leon Friedman are co-counsel for PEN and Arcade. For links to the relevant OFAC rulings and additional materials, visit http://aaupnet.org/ofac. About the AAP/PSP Members of the Professional/Scholarly Publishing (PSP (PlayStation Portable) See PlayStation. ) Division of the Association of American Publishers, Inc. (AAP AAP - Association of American Publishers ) publish the vast majority of materials used in the U.S. by scholars and professionals in science, medicine, technology, business, law, reference, social science and the humanities. The Division's (www.pspcentral.org) 182 professional societies, commercial publishers and university presses produce books, journals, computer software, databases and electronic products. About the AAUP The AAUP (www.aaupnet.org) counts among its members 111 nonprofit scholarly publishers affiliated with research universities, scholarly societies, research institutions and museums located in 43 states. Collectively they publish around 10,000 books each year and over 700 journals in virtually every field of human knowledge. About PEN American Center PEN American Center is an organization of over 2,500 prominent novelists, poets, essayists, translators, playwrights, and editors. As part of International PEN, it and its affiliated organizations have defended free and open communication within and among nations for more than 80 years. The 2,500 PEN American Center (www.pen.org) members are a major voice of the national and international literary community. About Arcade Arcade Publishing, Inc. (www.arcadepub.com) is an independent book publisher based in New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. . Founded in 1988, it publishes fiction and nonfiction by authors from around the world, including works by some of the most prominent authors of our time. Arcade is the publisher of the upcoming PEN Anthology of Contemporary Iranian Literature. |
|
||||||||||||

Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion