Join us May 10-12 in Charlottesville
Meet classmates and make new friends, share laughter and memories, and recall how you built the foundation for who you are today.
Former Clerks Explore Pending Case in Classroom
Two former Supreme Court clerks, including Katherine Twomey '08, recently offered students an in-depth study of a current Supreme Court case.
For Many, Collaboration on Open Source Offers Path to Better Technologies
Many in Silicon Valley tech companies and the larger IP community are embracing an open-source philosophy to build better products.
LL.M. Alumni Gather from Across Europe
Alumni of the Law School's Graduate Studies Program met in Vienna in July for a reunion that included touring the local sights and academic sessions on data protection and privacy.
Judge Paul Michel '66 Discusses Career, Future of Intellectual Property
Michel, one of the nation's foremost intellectual property experts, has a prescription for the future of patents.
Piecing Together the Patent Puzzle
Thanks to the advent of technologies ranging from iPads to smart phones, consumers are starting to understand how much intellectual property law matters — and how influental the patent process is.
A Monopoly that Needs Privatizing?
Professor John Duffy proposes giving the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office the power to oversee and certify private firms that review applications and issue patents.
Janet Nolan '89 helps prosecute health care fraud and abuse cases for the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services division of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.