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An Explicit Policy Lever For Patent Scope, Anna B. Laakmann
An Explicit Policy Lever For Patent Scope, Anna B. Laakmann
Anna B Laakmann
Since its inception in 1982, the Federal Circuit has declined to take an overt role in setting patent policy. Dan Burk and Mark Lemley have observed that the court instead implicitly engineers patent policy through its selective application of its patentability rules, which operate as “policy levers.” Recent decisions on the patentability of diagnostic and therapeutic methods illustrate the problem with this approach. By maintaining a façade of adjudicative rule formalism while tacitly manipulating its rules to approximate policy goals, the court creates doctrinal confusion. More importantly, it perpetuates empirical uncertainty about the patent law’s specific practical effects.
The Article …
Pragmatic Patent Adjudication, Anna B. Laakmann
Pragmatic Patent Adjudication, Anna B. Laakmann
Anna B Laakmann
The Federal Circuit was created in large part to introduce stability and predictability into the patent law. By many accounts, it is failing to do so. Moreover, current patent doctrine does not adequately incorporate the patent system’s broader utilitarian purpose. Recent decisions on the patentability of diagnostic and therapeutic methods illustrate the fundamental flaws in the Federal Circuit’s jurisprudence. Doctrinal incoherence over medical methods is not simply an isolated glitch in the patent law. Rather, it serves as a case study of a larger problem with the court’s approach to questions of patent scope. By maintaining a façade of adjudicative …