2007 Fall Business Law Forum Faculty
Lewis & Clark Law School is pleased to welcome as
faculty to our thirteenth annual Business Law Forum nationally and internationally recognized authorities in the legal, economics and psychology fields.
Law Faculty
John Duffy Oswald Symister Colclough Research Professor of Law, George Washington University Law School
Temporal Considerations in Nonobviousness Analysis
Rochelle Dreyfuss Pauline Newman Professor of Law, New York University Law School
Rebecca Eisenberg Robert and Barbara Luciano Professor of Law, University of Michigan Law School
Pharma's Nonobvious Problem
Gregory Mandel Professor of Law, Temple University School of Law
The Nonobvious Problem
Robert Merges Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati Professor of Law and Technology, UC Berkeley Law School
Joseph S. Miller Professor of Law, Lewis & Clark Law School
Are Erroneous Patent Denials Better than Erroneous Grants?
Katherine Strandburg Associate Professor of Law, DePaul University College of Law
Nonobviousness and Nerd Culture
R. Polk Wagner Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School
Feeding the Trolls: KSR, the Supreme Court and the End of Patent Reform
Psychology Faculty
Janet Davidson Associate Professor and Psychology Department Chair, Lewis & Clark College
Colleen Seifert Professor & Honors Program Coordinator, University of Michigan Now Why Didn't I Think of That? The Cognitive Processes That Create the Obvious
Steven Smith Professor, Texas A&M University Invisible Assumptions and Unintentional Use of Knowledge and Experiences in Creative Cognition
R. Keith Sawyer Associate Professor of Education, Washington University St. Louis Economics Faculty
Vincenzo Denicolo Professor, University of Bologna
The Nonobviousness Requirement With Complementary Innovations
Michael Katz Sarin Chair in Strategy and Leadership, Haas School of Business
Haas Economic Analysis and Policy Group
Professor, Department of Economics
Director, Center for Telecommunications and Digital Convergence
UC Berkeley
Suzanne Scotchmer Professor of Economics and Public Policy, UC Berkeley Nonobviousness, Options and the Scarcity of Ideas
Scott Stern Associate Professor, Management & Strategy, Northwestern University The Strategic Impact of Patent Office Standards
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