Professor Ernst Publishes 2014-2015 Update to Patents Chapter in Business Litigation Treatise
In 2011, Professor Samuel Ernst first co-authored (with The Honorable Timothy B. Dyk of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit) the Chapter on Patents in the leading treatise BUSINESS AND COMMERCIAL LITIGATION IN FEDERAL COURTS (now in its third edition). For the past three years, Professor Ernst and Judge Dyk have completed
Northwestern Law Dean Daniel Rodriguez Discusses the Law-Business-Technology Interface Impact on Professional Education at Latest Dialogue
On Monday, January 26, 2015, Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law welcomed Daniel B. Rodriguez , Dean and Harold Washington Professor of Northwestern University School of Law, and Immediate Past President of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). Dean Rodriguez presented his talk, The Law-Business-Technology Interface and its Impact on Professional Education
2 Fowler Law Students Will Travel to Laos for Summer Documentary Film Program
Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law students Anna Caludac (JD ’16) and Neusha Ghaedi (JD ’16) have been selected to participate in the Chapman University International Documentary Scholarship Program that will take place in Laos during the summer of 2015. The Chapman University International Documentary Scholarship Program is a unique interdisciplinary documentary
Professor Ernst Publishes “Patent Exhaustion for the Exhausted Defendant: Should Parties Be Able to Contract Around Exhaustion in Settling Patent Litigation?”
Professor Samuel Ernst’s article “Patent Exhaustion for the Exhausted Defendant: Should Parties Be Able to Contract Around Exhaustion in Settling Patent Litigation?” was recently published in University of Illinois Journal of Law, Technology & Polic y (Volume 2014, Issue 2, 2014). Excerpt from the abstract: “The first sale doctrine provides that when a patent
A Brief Note about My Return Trip to Ghana
Chapman University permits me to continue my teaching in Africa, which I have been able to do every other year for the last fourteen years. I have taught at the School of Banking and Finance in Rwanda, the Kigali Institute of Science and Technology in Rwanda, the University of Asmara in Eritrea (twice), and Ashesi
Top 10 List: How to Survive the 1L Year of Law School
Written by Jennifer Tran, third year student at Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law New law students often wonder if it’s possible to survive this thing called the 1L year of law school. Be assured, most will survive. As a current 3L student at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law, I realize
Alumni Highlights – January 2015
Are you an alumni? Have you recently changed firms, been promoted, published or made partner and would like to be featured in the next online edition of Alumni Highlights? Submit a class note! Richard E. Quintilone II (JD ’98) and Alis M. Rabet (JD ’13) of Quintilone & Associates succeeded in obtaining a $2.5 million judgment in
How My Summer Internship in Cambodia Challenged My Character
Working with Legal Support for Children and Women (LSCW) in Phnom Penh, Cambodia this past summer has been a great learning experience. I always had a passion to fight human trafficking, but felt like I couldn’t offer much to help. However, my coworkers during the two months in Cambodia changed my mindset and really challenged
Fowler Law Faculty Meets to Celebrate the Publication of Three New Books
The Chapman University Fowler School of Law faculty Committee on Teaching Effectiveness and Scholarship (COTES) recently hosted two events to celebrate the publication of new books by three members of the Fowler Law faculty. On November 20, 2014, the faculty members gathered to celebrate Professor Michael Bazyler and his new book Forgotten Trials of
Professor John Eastman Featured in “The American Mind” Interview Series
Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law Professor John C. Eastman was recently featured in a four-part video interview series on The American Mind with Charles R. Kesler . The series includes Dr. Eastman discussing the following topics: The Disappearing Constitution: What Should Law School Teach? Natural Law & the Conservatives