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Full-Text Articles in Law

Covenants Not To Compete, John Dwight Ingram Jul 2015

Covenants Not To Compete, John Dwight Ingram

Akron Law Review

This article will discuss the enforceability of covenants not to compete when they are used in commercial business settings. There will be no discussion of the forms of relief available if a court determines that a covenant is enforceable. Also omitted from this article are noncompetition agreements which accompany the sale of a business or dissolution of a partnership. Finally, a discussion concerning covenants not to compete between professionals (attorneys, physicians, etc.) will not be a part of this current article.

In most states today, courts will enforce a covenant not to compete if the covenant is found to be …


Relevance Is Irrelevant: A Plain Meaning Approach To Title Vii Retaliation Claims, Eric Ledger Jun 2015

Relevance Is Irrelevant: A Plain Meaning Approach To Title Vii Retaliation Claims, Eric Ledger

Akron Law Review

This article is a case note on the Sixth Circuit’s decision in Niswander. The position of this note is that for the purpose of establishing a retaliation claim under Title VII, 42 U.S.C.A. § 2000e3(a), courts should consider the good-faith production of confidential documents in response to a formal request for discovery as participation activity, not opposition activity. Whether the produced documents are relevant to a formal discovery request should not factor into the participation analysis. The determining question should be whether the employee acted in good faith.

This note will first describe the factual background of the Niswander …


Beyond Incentives: Expanding The Theoretical Framework For Patent Law Analysis, Ofer Tur-Sinai Jun 2015

Beyond Incentives: Expanding The Theoretical Framework For Patent Law Analysis, Ofer Tur-Sinai

Akron Law Review

This Article challenges this one-dimensional approach and calls for a more frequent use of non-utilitarian considerations in discussions of the patent system. To be sure, this Article does not call for the complete abolition of economic analysis of patent law, which, despite its shortcomings, remains the most important tool in the evaluation of legal rules in this arena, where the vast majority of the players are motivated primarily by economic considerations. However, it does call for a broader use of non-economic considerations, particularly those embedded in the labor theory and the personality theory, alongside the economic analysis. As will be …