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Full-Text Articles in Law

The Promise Of Patent-Backed Finance For Smes And Universities, And Shifting Patent Eligible Subject Matter, Michael S. Mireles, Mattias Karlsson Dinnetz Jan 2022

The Promise Of Patent-Backed Finance For Smes And Universities, And Shifting Patent Eligible Subject Matter, Michael S. Mireles, Mattias Karlsson Dinnetz

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

This Article reviews and addresses some of the problems concerning adequate capital to develop patented inventions and products, and inhibiting the widespread use of patents to raise financing.

The Article divides the IP finance market into three separate, but interrelated markets and analyzes problems, including U.S. patent-eligible subject matter doctrine, within those markets impeding patent backed financing. The Article provides numerous proposals, some of which are in the literature, and calls for additional research for addressing the issues.


Statutory Interpretation From The Outside, Kevin Tobia, Victoria Nourse, Brian G. Slocum Jan 2022

Statutory Interpretation From The Outside, Kevin Tobia, Victoria Nourse, Brian G. Slocum

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

How should judges decide which linguistic canons to apply in inter­preting statutes? One important answer looks to the inside of the legisla­tive process: Follow the canons that lawmakers contemplate. A different answer, based on the “ordinary meaning” doctrine, looks to the outside: Follow the canons that guide an ordinary person’s understanding of the legal text. We offer a novel framework for empirically testing linguistic canons “from the outside,” recruiting 4,500 people from the United States and a sample of law students to evaluate hypothetical scenarios that correspond to each canon’s triggering conditions. The empirical findings provide evidence about which traditional …


The Complex Dualisms Of Corporations And Democracy, Franklin A. Gevurtz Jan 2022

The Complex Dualisms Of Corporations And Democracy, Franklin A. Gevurtz

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

These are perilous times for American democracy. Among the threats, many point to the power of corporations. This article examines that threat by considering a series of dualisms characterizing the relationship between corporations and democracy. This begins with a look at the anti- as well as the pro-democratic impacts of the earliest corporations and the paradoxes with respect to democracy created during the evolution of corporate law. The article then looks at internal corporate governance (so-called “corporate” or “shareholder democracy”) to show how, on the one hand, it contains features addressing some of the greatest current threats to American democracy, …


The Constitutional Right To “Establish A Home", John G. Sprankling Jan 2022

The Constitutional Right To “Establish A Home", John G. Sprankling

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

Everyone needs a home. But exclusionary zoning ordinances in many communities prevent low-income and moderate-income families from securing affordable homes, disproportionately harming people of color. Because these ordinances satisfy the rational basis test, they have been immune from substantive due process attack. This Article provides a new method to challenge the constitutionality of exclusionary zoning.

For decades, the Supreme Court has recognized that the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment protects the right to “establish a home.” The Clause was adopted, in part, as a response to the “Black Codes” enacted by southern states in the post-Civil War era …


Trump’S Legacy: The Long-Term Risks To American Democracy, Michael Vitiello Jan 2022

Trump’S Legacy: The Long-Term Risks To American Democracy, Michael Vitiello

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

While President Trump was extreme in his contempt for legal and political norms, his presidency was consistent with the direction in which the Republican Party has moved over the past several decades. Strategies put in place by Trump and other Republicans, along with institutional aspects of our country’s “democracy,” assure the Republican Party’s continued, outsized controll despite Trump’s failure to achieve a second term.

This Article reviews Trump and his Administration’s contempt for political norms, explores the Republican Party’s hard turn to the right, and discusses how the Republicans have been able to hold onto power greater than one would …


Expanding Statutes Of Limitations For Sex Crimes: Bad Public Policy, Michael Vitiello Jan 2022

Expanding Statutes Of Limitations For Sex Crimes: Bad Public Policy, Michael Vitiello

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

The Victims’ Rights Movement has been one of the most consequential political forces in the United States over the past fifty-plus years. It has scored major legislative victories across the country. Every state and the federal government have adopted major laws advanced by the movement. After years of expanding prison populations, many policymakers and scholars have begun to question the wisdom of many of the movement’s legislative victories.


Despite current pushback against the movement, the movement and members of the public are pushing for the elimination or dramatic extensions of statutes of limitations for sex offenses and child-sex offenses. Such …


Leading Law Schools: Relationships, Influence, And Negotiation, Michael T. Colatrella Jr. Jan 2022

Leading Law Schools: Relationships, Influence, And Negotiation, Michael T. Colatrella Jr.

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.


Victim Blaming: When Is It Legally Appropriate?, Michael Vitiello Jan 2022

Victim Blaming: When Is It Legally Appropriate?, Michael Vitiello

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

Victim blaming: what person or justice system possessing a modicum of compassion could perpetuate harmful stereotypes and blame crime victims for what happened to them? In effect, this article explores that question. Rephrased, this article attempts to explain the focus on a victim's conduct when it is consistent with long-held principles of criminal law, with relevant comparisons made to tort law. Criminal law often makes a victim's conduct relevant to elements of a claim or defense. The topic is of special importance in an era of devastating attacks on social media and challenging subject matter such as sexual assault and …


Police Ignorance And (Un)Reasonable Fourth Amendment Exclusion, Nadia Banteka Jan 2022

Police Ignorance And (Un)Reasonable Fourth Amendment Exclusion, Nadia Banteka

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

The Fourth Amendment exclusion doctrine is as baffling as it is ubiquitous. Although courts rely on it every day to decide Fourth Amendment violations as well as defendants’ motions to suppress evidence obtained through these violations, virtually every aspect of the doctrine is a subject of fundamental disagreement and confusion. When defendants file motions to suppress unlawfully obtained evidence, the government often argues that even if a violation of the Fourth Amendment has transpired, the remedy of evidence suppression is barred because the police acted in “good faith,” meaning the officer reasonably, albeit mistakenly, believed the search or seizure was …


'Freedom's Just Another Word For Nothin' Left To Lose': The Ongoing Struggle To Properly Regulate The Gig Economy In California, Francis J. Mootz Iii, Jeffrey Michael Jan 2022

'Freedom's Just Another Word For Nothin' Left To Lose': The Ongoing Struggle To Properly Regulate The Gig Economy In California, Francis J. Mootz Iii, Jeffrey Michael

McGeorge School of Law Scholarly Articles

No abstract provided.