This paper analyzes the evolution of U.S. patent law between the first patent act in 1790 and 1870, the passage of the last major patent act of the nineteenth century. During most of the nineteenth century, patent law developed in the courts, and instrumental to this development were a relatively small patent bar, a subset of the judiciary, and several repeat parties who played a role in a significant proportion of patent cases. Yet at several junctures, most importantly with the major changes introduced in 1836, but also through minor statutory changes throughout the nineteenth century, Congress intervened to alter the patent statute. We argue that this evolution is best understood through an interest group-based analysis, focused on the q...
This paper examines the patenting in the U.S. from its origins in 1790 up to 1980. The prime intent ...
By the beginning of the nineteenth century, three countries had firmly established patent systems. I...
From the early days of the Republic, Congress and the federal courts grappled with the government’s ...
This paper analyzes the evolution of U.S. patent law between the first patent act in 1790 and 1870, ...
The question of institutional choice is important in all areas of the law, but particularly in the c...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...
One enduring historical debate concerns whether the American Constitution was intended to be classi...
As winter descended on Washington in December 1878, the Forty-fifth Congress gathered for what promi...
The patent system is in flux. Concerns abound about the imperfect fit between traditional patent rig...
The framers of the Federal Constitution shared with Thomas Jefferson his wish to see new inventions...
The recent influx of patent pools, research consortia, and similar cooperative groups led by compani...
This paper surveys the recent historiography of three national patent systems during the period of t...
Although the patent systems of the United States and Europe have become continuously more similar th...
This Article approaches the research exemption, and related legal developments, as a case study in t...
The conventional wisdom holds that American patents have always been grants of special monopoly priv...
This paper examines the patenting in the U.S. from its origins in 1790 up to 1980. The prime intent ...
By the beginning of the nineteenth century, three countries had firmly established patent systems. I...
From the early days of the Republic, Congress and the federal courts grappled with the government’s ...
This paper analyzes the evolution of U.S. patent law between the first patent act in 1790 and 1870, ...
The question of institutional choice is important in all areas of the law, but particularly in the c...
Patent law today is a complex institution in most developed economies and the appropriate structure ...
One enduring historical debate concerns whether the American Constitution was intended to be classi...
As winter descended on Washington in December 1878, the Forty-fifth Congress gathered for what promi...
The patent system is in flux. Concerns abound about the imperfect fit between traditional patent rig...
The framers of the Federal Constitution shared with Thomas Jefferson his wish to see new inventions...
The recent influx of patent pools, research consortia, and similar cooperative groups led by compani...
This paper surveys the recent historiography of three national patent systems during the period of t...
Although the patent systems of the United States and Europe have become continuously more similar th...
This Article approaches the research exemption, and related legal developments, as a case study in t...
The conventional wisdom holds that American patents have always been grants of special monopoly priv...
This paper examines the patenting in the U.S. from its origins in 1790 up to 1980. The prime intent ...
By the beginning of the nineteenth century, three countries had firmly established patent systems. I...
From the early days of the Republic, Congress and the federal courts grappled with the government’s ...