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Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya

Music artists are usually incentivized to create when they receive royalties or revenue from the commercialization of their music. Although copyright and related rights initially vest with music artists to enable them to extract the full value of their exclusive rights, many lack the resources to ac...

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Main Author: Nyehita, Suzanne
Other Authors: Tong, Lee-Ann
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2025
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Nyehita, Suzanne
author2 Tong, Lee-Ann
author_browse Nyehita, Suzanne
Tong, Lee-Ann
author_facet Tong, Lee-Ann
Nyehita, Suzanne
author_sort Nyehita, Suzanne
collection Thesis
description Music artists are usually incentivized to create when they receive royalties or revenue from the commercialization of their music. Although copyright and related rights initially vest with music artists to enable them to extract the full value of their exclusive rights, many lack the resources to achieve commercial success independently. They often assign or license rights to intermediaries, leading to less favourable remuneration compared to the substantial earnings of powerful intermediaries. These contractual relationships are often shaped by unequal bargaining power, favouring intermediaries who control transactions and set remuneration terms. Some scholars argue that disparities are inherent in the music business model and unrelated to fairness/equity. Others contend that the position of music artists has improved, particularly for high profile artists with corporate-affiliations and access to professional services. However, many music artists still lack the market power of larger intermediaries and struggle to secure favourable remuneration. This thesis explores the unequal dynamics between music artists and intermediaries, advocating for state intervention to promote equitable revenue distribution. It proposes a benchmark test grounded in the Rawlsian theory of justice and legislative interventions that prioritize protecting music artists as the least advantaged stakeholders. The thesis advances Rawls' application to copyright by focusing on the exercise of music artists' exclusive rights in contractual relationships with intermediaries. It outlines four principles: justice in the initial and subsequent acquisition of rights, transitional justice for reforms and reparative justice. Highlighting shortcomings in Kenya's copyright system, it recommends reforms informed by insights from Germany and South Africa.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:23.309Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41864 Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya Nyehita, Suzanne Tong, Lee-Ann Schonwetter, Tobias Kenya, Music artists Remuneration Music artists are usually incentivized to create when they receive royalties or revenue from the commercialization of their music. Although copyright and related rights initially vest with music artists to enable them to extract the full value of their exclusive rights, many lack the resources to achieve commercial success independently. They often assign or license rights to intermediaries, leading to less favourable remuneration compared to the substantial earnings of powerful intermediaries. These contractual relationships are often shaped by unequal bargaining power, favouring intermediaries who control transactions and set remuneration terms. Some scholars argue that disparities are inherent in the music business model and unrelated to fairness/equity. Others contend that the position of music artists has improved, particularly for high profile artists with corporate-affiliations and access to professional services. However, many music artists still lack the market power of larger intermediaries and struggle to secure favourable remuneration. This thesis explores the unequal dynamics between music artists and intermediaries, advocating for state intervention to promote equitable revenue distribution. It proposes a benchmark test grounded in the Rawlsian theory of justice and legislative interventions that prioritize protecting music artists as the least advantaged stakeholders. The thesis advances Rawls' application to copyright by focusing on the exercise of music artists' exclusive rights in contractual relationships with intermediaries. It outlines four principles: justice in the initial and subsequent acquisition of rights, transitional justice for reforms and reparative justice. Highlighting shortcomings in Kenya's copyright system, it recommends reforms informed by insights from Germany and South Africa. 2025-09-18T12:36:35Z 2025-09-18T12:36:35Z 2025 2025-09-18T12:34:44Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41864 en eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Kenya, Music artists
Remuneration
Nyehita, Suzanne
Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya
title_full Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya
title_fullStr Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya
title_full_unstemmed Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya
title_short Regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in Kenya
title_sort regulating for the equitable remuneration of music artists in kenya
topic Kenya, Music artists
Remuneration
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41864
work_keys_str_mv AT nyehitasuzanne regulatingfortheequitableremunerationofmusicartistsinkenya