Document Type

Article

Publication Title

Indiana Law Journal

Abstract

It is a great honor for me to speak here this afternoon. The Harris Lecture Series is indeed one of the single most distinguished series of faculty lectures found in law schools throughout the country today, and I am proud to join the distinguished list of lecturers that have graced this podium in years past. The topic of this lecture is shrouded in ambiguity, for it travels under the name Intellectual Property: Old Boundaries and New Frontiers, which allows me more or less complete freedom to speak about the general field of intellectual property without violating the jurisdictional constraints imposed on me by the original title. In fact, my more serious purpose for choosing this particular title is to suggest that we are capable oflearning much about one of the fastest and most modern fields of law-intellectual property-by studying one of the most traditional areas oflaw, which for reasons that should become clear I will call compendiously the law of tangible property.

First Page

803

Volume

76

Publication Date

2001

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