The Copyright Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan, enacted on 17 July 2001, provides comprehensive protection for literary, artistic, and scientific works. Bhutan became a member of WIPO in 2001 and acceded to the Berne Convention in 2004, aligning its domestic framework with international standards for intellectual property protection.
The Copyright Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2001, which came into force on 17 July 2001, establishes the foundational legal framework for the protection of original creative works in Bhutan. The Act grants authors and creators exclusive economic and moral rights over their works — including the rights to reproduce, distribute, perform, adapt, and publicly display them — and provides civil and criminal remedies against unauthorised use. Enacted in the same year that Bhutan joined the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO), the legislation represented Bhutan's conscious alignment with the international intellectual property system at a time when the kingdom was broadening its participation in global trade and cultural exchange. A companion statute, the Industrial Property Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2001, enacted on the same date, covers trademarks, patents, industrial designs, and geographical indications.
Scope of Protection
The Copyright Act protects a broad range of original works. Protected categories include:
- Literary works, encompassing books, articles, computer programs, and compilations of data;
- Musical works, including compositions with or without lyrics, covering both traditional Bhutanese musical forms and contemporary compositions;
- Dramatic and choreographic works;
- Artistic works, including paintings, drawings, sculpture, architecture, and the thirteen Zorig Chusum traditional arts and crafts;
- Audiovisual works, including films and television productions;
- Derivative works, such as translations and adaptations, provided the underlying work is used with authorisation.
Protection is automatic upon creation and fixation — that is, no formal registration is required for copyright to subsist. However, the Act provides for a voluntary registration system administered by the Department of Media, Creative Industry and Intellectual Property under the Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Employment (MoICE), which offers practical benefits in the event of a legal dispute by establishing a prima facie record of authorship and date of creation.
Duration of Protection
The Act provides the following terms of protection:
- Individual works: The author's lifetime plus fifty years from the end of the calendar year of death;
- Joint works: Fifty years from the end of the calendar year in which the last surviving author dies;
- Collective works and works of corporate authorship: Fifty years from the end of the calendar year of first publication or, if unpublished, of creation;
- Audiovisual and anonymous or pseudonymous works: Fifty years from the end of the calendar year of first publication.
These terms reflect the minimum standards prescribed by the Berne Convention and the Agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS), to which Bhutan is bound through its WTO membership.
Fair Use and Limitations
The Copyright Act incorporates a doctrine of fair use — termed "limitations and exceptions" in the statutory text — that permits the use of protected works without authorisation in specified circumstances. These include use for the purposes of criticism, commentary, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research, provided the use is proportionate and does not unreasonably prejudice the rights of the author. Educational institutions may draw on copyrighted materials in the course of instruction, within limits. Public domain works — those whose protection term has expired — may be used freely, a provision of particular relevance for Bhutan's rich repository of traditional oral literature, manuscript culture, and folk art forms whose origins predate any modern copyright framework.
International Framework
Bhutan became a member of WIPO in 2001, the same year the Copyright Act was enacted, signalling a deliberate integration of intellectual property governance into the country's development policy. On 25 November 2004, Bhutan formally acceded to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works — the foundational international copyright treaty, which requires member states to extend national treatment to the authors of all other member countries and to observe minimum standards of protection. Membership of the Berne Convention is particularly significant for Bhutanese authors and artists whose works circulate internationally, as it ensures automatic legal protection in 181 member countries without the need for separate registration in each jurisdiction.
The Industrial Property Act 2001 similarly aligns Bhutan with international norms for trademarks and patents. Trademark registration is handled by MoICE's Intellectual Property Division and provides exclusive rights to registered mark owners for a renewable ten-year term. A registration system for geographical indications — potentially valuable for protecting traditional Bhutanese products such as ara (fermented grain beverage), hand-woven textiles, and medicinal herbs — has also been established under the industrial property framework.
Enforcement and Challenges
Civil remedies for copyright infringement include injunctive relief, monetary damages, and the destruction of infringing copies. Criminal remedies — fines and imprisonment — address wilful infringement, particularly commercial-scale piracy. In practice, enforcement capacity remains limited by Bhutan's small legal profession, low volume of intellectual property litigation, and the prevalence of informal digital copying. The growth of the Bhutanese film industry, digital music, and online publishing has made copyright protection increasingly relevant to a new generation of Bhutanese creators.
References
- Office of the Attorney General. The Copyright Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan, 2001. https://oag.gov.bt/wp-content/uploads/2010/05/Copyright-Act-of-Bhutan-2001.pdf
- WIPO. "Copyright Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan, 2001." WIPO Lex. https://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/legislation/details/5213
- WIPO. "Accession by the Kingdom of Bhutan — Berne Convention." Notification 243. https://www.wipo.int/wipolex/en/treaties/notifications/details/treaty_berne_243
- Ministry of Industry, Commerce and Employment. "Department of Media, Creative Industry and Intellectual Property." https://www.moice.gov.bt/?page_id=262253
- Generis Online. "An Overview of Copyright Protection Laws in Bhutan." https://generisonline.com/an-overview-of-copyright-protection-laws-in-bhutan/
See also
Copyright Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2001
The Copyright Act of the Kingdom of Bhutan 2001, which came into force on 17 July 2001, is the principal legislation governing intellectual property protection for literary and artistic works in Bhutan. The Act provides copyright protection for the life of the author plus 50 years, covers a broad range of creative works, and places government and legislative texts in the public domain. Bhutan acceded to the Berne Convention for the Protection of Literary and Artistic Works on 25 November 2004.
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