You are here: Â鶹ÊÓƵ Washington College of Law Impact Initiatives Programs Pijip Events Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property

Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property

Trademark and Patent Works in Progress Colloquia

WCL Building

September 13, 2019
9:00-5:00 | Rooms NT-02,03

The Â鶹ÊÓƵWCL Program on Information Justice and Intellectual Property will host the 2019 Trademark and Patent Works-in-Progress Colloquia on September 13. The colloquia is being organized by Professors Christine Haight Farley and Jonas Anderson. More information will be made available on this page as it becomes available. 

PIJIP News

Professor Vicki Phillips To Be Honored By The DC Bar With The Champion of IP Award

Professor Vicki Phillips To Be Honored By The DC Bar With The Champion of IP Award

01 May, 2024

Intellectual Property (IP) Law Community of the District of Columbia (DC) Bar will honor Professor Victoria Phillips with the esteemed Champion of IP Award.  The annual Champion of IP Award celebrates an individual who has impacted IP policy, fostered innovation, and passionately advocated for intellectual property rights. 

Read more
Â鶹ÊÓƵWCL & WIPO Sign an MOU

Â鶹ÊÓƵWCL & WIPO Sign an MOU

30 Apr, 2024

On April 22nd, Dean Roger Fairfax and Sheriff Saadallah, Executive Director of the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) Academy, signed a Memorandum of Understanding to continue the close relationship between Â鶹ÊÓƵ Washington College of Law's (Â鶹ÊÓƵWCL) Program on Information Justice & Intellectual Property (PIJIP) and WIPO.

Read more
Professor Michael Carroll Published New Paper "The Triumph of Three Big Ideas in Fair Use Jurisprudence"

Professor Michael Carroll Published New Paper "The Triumph of Three Big Ideas in Fair Use Jurisprudence"

30 Apr, 2024

Professors Carroll and Peter Jaszi, published a new paper, The Triumph of Three Big Ideas in Fair Use Jurisprudence.  The article, published in the Tulane Law Review, argues that the Court’s decisions on fair use, which represent one-third of the Court’s total merits decisions, are historic.

Read more