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University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Law

2009

Patents

Discipline

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Learning From Litigation: What Can Lawsuits Teach Us About The Role Of Human Gene Patents In Research And Innovation, Christopher M. Holman Jan 2009

Learning From Litigation: What Can Lawsuits Teach Us About The Role Of Human Gene Patents In Research And Innovation, Christopher M. Holman

Faculty Works

In 2007, I published an article entitled "The Impact of Human Gene Patents on Innovation and Access: A Survey of Human Gene Patent Litigation," in which I reported the results of a project to identify and characterize all instances in which a human gene patent was asserted in a lawsuit. For the purposes of this study, I essentially treated any US patent claiming a product or process involving one or more specific human genes as a "human gene patent."

In the present article I explore in greater depth some of the implications of the 2007 study, and discuss some general …


The Perils Of Taking Property Too Far, Christopher Heaney, Julia Carbone, E. Richard Gold, Tania Bubela, Christopher M. Holman, Allessandra Colaianni, Tracy R. Lewis, Bob Cook-Deegan Jan 2009

The Perils Of Taking Property Too Far, Christopher Heaney, Julia Carbone, E. Richard Gold, Tania Bubela, Christopher M. Holman, Allessandra Colaianni, Tracy R. Lewis, Bob Cook-Deegan

Faculty Works

Many policies governing biobanks revolve around ownership and control of the materials and information in them. Those who manage biobanks may be tempted to seek the broadest legal rights possible over material and data. However, we suggest that even if ownership and control were clearly defined by the law and readily obtained by biobanks, how legal rights are used in practice matters as much or more than the rules for ownership. We draw lessons from the stories of genetic testing for Canavan disease and inherited breast and ovarian cancers. In both cases, the use or assertion of legal rights led …