Intellectual Property and Technology Law Faculty Demonstrate High Level of Legal Scholarship  

Santa Clara University’s law faculty members teaching in the areas of intellectual property and technology law have produced a substantial amount of cutting edge legal scholarship according to Dean Donald J. Polden. “This is an extraordinary group of very productive legal scholars and they have assembled a substantial body of useful research and scholarship for lawyers, judges and other academic lawyers. Don Chisum has created a definitive work on American patent law and it spans twenty volumes. Moreover, Tyler Ochoa’s research and scholarship in the area of copyright law places him among the nation’s most outstanding and productive scholars work in that area.  Other Santa Clara law faculty members are noted scholars in such legal issues as nanotechnology, biotechnology, medical technology and ethics, telecommunications, the internet, privacy, and other areas.” 

The following is a list of the scholarly work produced by Santa Clara law faculty in the areas of intellectual property and technology law:  

Recent Publications by Santa Clara University School of Law High Tech Faculty 

Donald S. Chisum  

Chisum on Patents: A Treatise on the Law of Patentability, Validity and Infringement (LEXIS 2005 ed.) (21 volumes)

Donald S. Chisum, Craig Allen Nard, Herbert F. Schwartz, Pauline Newman & F. Scott Kieff, Principles of Patent Law: Cases and Materials (Foundation Press 3rd ed. 2004) and 2005 Supplement

Tyler T. Ochoa

Craig Joyce, Marshall Leaffer, Peter Jaszi & Tyler Ochoa, Copyright Law (LEXIS 6th ed. 2003) and 2005 Cumulative Supplement

The Terminator as Eraser: How Arnold Schwarzenegger Used the Right of Publicity to Terminate Non-Defamatory Political Speech, 45 Santa Clara L. Rev. 651 (2005) (with David S. Welkowitz)

The Schwarzenegger Bobblehead Case: Introduction and Statement of Facts, 45 Santa Clara L. Rev. 547 (2005)

Copyright, Derivative Works and Fixation: Is Galoob a Mirage, or Does the Form (Gen) of the Alleged Derivative Work Matter?, 20 Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. 991 (2004)

1984 and Beyond: Two Decades of Copyright Law, 20 Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. 167 (2003)

Introduction: Rights of Attribution, Section 43(a) of the Lanham Act, and the Copyright Public Domain, 24 Whittier L. Rev. 911 (2003)

Brief Amici Curiae of Intellectual Property Law Professors in Dastar Corp. v. Twentieth Century Fox Film Corp., No. 02-428, United States Supreme Court, October Term 2002, reprinted in 24 Whittier L. Rev. 931 (2003)

Origins and Meanings of the Public Domain, 28 U. Dayton L. Rev. 215 (2002)

The Anti-Monopoly Origins of the Patent and Copyright Clause, 49 J. Copyr. Soc’y USA 675 (2002) (with Mark Rose), reprinted in 84 J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc’y 909 (2002)

Patent and Copyright Term Extension and the Constitution: A Historical Perspective, 49 J. Copyr. Soc’y USA 19 (2001), cited in Eldred v. Ashcroft, 537 U.S. 186, 202 (2003)

June R. Carbone

Leslie J. Harris, Lee E. Teitelbaum & June R. Carbone, Family Law (Aspen 3rd ed. 2005)

Markets, Subsidies, Regulation and Trust: Building Ethical Understandings Into The Market For Fertility Services, Iowa J. Gender, Race & Just. (2005) (with Paige Gottheim)

The Biological Basis of Commitment: Does One Size Fit All?, 25 Women’s Rights L. Rptr. 223 (2004) (with Naomi Cahn)

Introduction: Teaching Socio-Economics, 41 San Diego L. Rev. 1 (2004)

Toward a More Communitarian Future? The Governance of Biotechnology, in Technology, Governance and Public Policy, STS Nexus, Vol. 4., No. 2, p. 21 (2004)

Toward a More Communitarian Future? Fukuyama as the Fundamentalist Secular Humanist, 101 Mich. L. Rev. 1906 (2003)

Which Ties Bind? Redefining the Parent-Child Relationship in an Age of Genetic Certainty, 11 Wm. & Mary Bill of Rights J. 1011 (2003) (with Naomi Cahn)

Ethics, Patents, and the Sustainability of the Biotech Business Model, 17 Int’l Rev. L. Computers & Tech. 203 (2003)

Back to the Future: Intellectual Property and the Rediscovery of Property Rights and Wrongs, 46 St. Louis U. L.J. 629 (2002)

Access to Global Markets and the Creation of Trust: The Future of Genetically Modified Foods, 20 Bus. & Prof. Ethics J. 79 (2001)

Stephen F. Diamond

Exercising the Governance Option: Shareholder Activism in the Era of Fictitious Capital (work in progress)

The PetroChina Syndrome: Regulating Capital Markets in the Anti-Globalization Era,   29 J. Corp. L. 39 (2003)

The “Race to the Bottom” Returns: China’s Challenge to the International Labor Movement, 10 U.C. Davis J. Int’l L. & Pol’y 39 (2003)

David D. Friedman

Law’s Order: What Economics Has to Do With Law and Why it Matters (Princeton U. Press 2000)

The Case for Privacy, in Andrew I. Cohen & Christopher Heath Wellman, Eds., Contemporary Debates in Applied Ethics (Blackwell 2005)

Economics and Evolutionary Psychology, in Roger Koppl, Ed., Evolutionary Psychology and Economic Theory (Elsevier 2005)

From Imperial China to Cyberspace: Contracting Without the State, J. L. Econ. & Policy (forthcoming 2005)

Technology and the Case for Free Banking, in Fred E. Foldvary & Daniel B. Klein, Eds., The Half-Life of Policy Rationales: How New Technology Affects Old Policy Issues (N.Y.U. Press 2003) (with Kerry L. Macintosh)

Contracts in Cyberspace, 6 J. Internet L. 12 (Dec. 2002)

Does Technology Require New Law?, 25 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Policy 71 (2001)

The Cash of the Twenty-First Century, 17 Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. 273 (2001) (with Kerry L. Macintosh)

Privacy and Technology, 17 Social Phil. & Pol’y 186 (2000)

Dorothy J. Glancy

Patenting Human Life: Some Patent Law Background (Santa Clara Univ. 2002)

Privacy on the Open Road, 30 Ohio N.U. L. Rev. 295 (2004)

At the Intersection of Visible and Invisible Worlds: United States Privacy Law and the Internet, 16 Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. 357 (2000)

Allen S. Hammond IV

The Law of Networks (Aspen forthcoming 2006) (with Catherine J.K. Sandoval)

Quantifying the Nexus: New Data on the Relationships Between Ownership and Diversity (Final Report submitted to F.C.C.; accepted for publication)

Serving the Public Interest: Broadcast News, Public Affairs Programming, and the Case for Minority Ownership (with Christine M. Bachen & Catherine J.K. Sandoval) in Philip Napoli, Ed., Media Diversity and Localism: Meanings and Metrics (Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc., forthcoming 2006)

Universal Service: Problems, Solutions, and Responsive Policies, 57 Fed. Comm. L.J. 187 (2005)

Reflections on the Myth of Icarus in the Age of Information, 19 Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. 407 (2003)

The FCC’s Third Report on Broadband Deployment: Inequitable, Untimely and Unreasonable, 24 Hastings Comm. & Ent. L.J. 539 (2002)

The Digital Divide in the New Millennium, 20 Cardozo Arts & Ent. L.J. 135 (2002)

Copyrights in the Internet Age: Stopping Piracy, in Practicing Law Institute, Handling Intellectual Property Issues in Business Transactions (2002)

Anna M. Han

Legal Aspects of Franchising in China, in Ilan Alon & Dianne H.B. Welsh, International Franchising in Emerging Markets: China, India and Other   Asian Markets (CCH 2001)

Holding Up More Than Half the Sky: Marketization and the Status of Women in China, 11 J. Contemp. Leg. Issues 791 (2001)

Kerry Lynn Macintosh

Illegal Beings: Human Clones and the Law (Cambridge 2005)

Secured Transactions and Payment Systems: Problems and Answers (Aspen 2d ed. 2003) (with Leo L. Clarke, John F. Dolan, Larry T. Garvin, & Allen R. Kamp)

Human Clones and International Human Rights, 3 Santa Clara J. Int’l L. (forthcoming 2006), and U. Tech. Sydney L. Rev. (forthcoming 2006)

Technology and the Case for Free Banking, in Fred E. Foldvary & Daniel B. Klein, Eds., The Half-Life of Policy Rationales: How New Technology Affects Old Policy Issues (N.Y.U. Press 2003) (with David D. Friedman)

Electronic Cash: More Questions Than Answers, 7 B.U. J. Sci. & Tech. L. 213 (2001)

The Cash of the Twenty-First Century, 17 Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. 273 (2001) (with David D. Friedman)

Michelle Oberman

When the Truth is Not Enough: Tissue Donation, Altruism and the Market, in Symposium, Precious Commodities: The Supply and Demand of Body Parts, 55 DePaul L. Rev. (forthcoming 2006)

Sex, Lies and the Duty to Disclose, 47 Ariz. L. Rev. (forthcoming 2005)

Introduction: Panel on the Use of Patients for Teaching Purposes Without Their Knowledge or Consent, 8 J. Health Care L. & Pol’y 210 (2005)

“Lady Madonna, Children at Your Feet”: Tragedies at the Intersection of Motherhood, Mental Illness and the Law, 10 Wm. & Mary J. Women & L. 33 (2003)

Dying Children and Medical Research: Access to Clinical Trials as Benefit and Burden, 29 Am. J. L. & Med. 301 (2003) (with Joel Frader)

Member, University of California at San Francisco Campus Committee on Gamete, Embryo, and Stem Cell Research (GESCR) (2005-present)

Member, Children’s Memorial Hospital Institutional Review Board (2000-2005)

Catherine J.K. Sandoval

The Law of Networks (Aspen forthcoming 2006) (with Allen S. Hammond IV)

Antitrust Law on the Borderland of Language and Market Definition: An Analysis of the Justice Department Review of the Merger of Univision and Hispanic Broadcasting Corporation (work in progress)

Serving the Public Interest: Broadcast News, Public Affairs Programming, and the Case for Minority Ownership (with Christine M. Bachen & Allen S. Hammond, IV) in Philip Napoli, Ed., Media Diversity and Localism: Meanings and Metrics (Lawrence Erlbaum Assoc., forthcoming 2006)