Law students in the Arts & Entertainment Advocacy Clinic at the Antonin Scalia Law School have participated in several projects with the U.S. Copyright Office. In 2015, students worked under the expert guidance of the Copyright Office’s Public Information and Education staff to learn more about public inquiries received by the agency, including questions on registration and recordation. In 2016, students surveyed international approaches to copyright issues such as registration and recordation. In a separate project, students examined how changes in the marketplace regarding distribution technology and other permissions may affect authors’ moral rights; they supported the April 2016 symposium on moral rights in the United States, co-sponsored by USCO and the GMU School of Law and its Center for the Protection of Intellectual Property. Working under Professor Sandra Aistars, GMU’s law students in 2017 completed a project studying registration matters.