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Graeme B. Dinwoodie
Professor of Law, Associate Dean and
Director of the Program in Intellectual Property Law
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Professor Graeme Dinwoodie joined the Chicago-Kent faculty in
2000 from the University of Cincinnati College of Law, where he
was a three-time recipient of the Goldman Prize for Excellence in
Teaching. He has also taught as a visiting professor at the University
of Pennsylvania Law School. In 2001, he was named a Norman and Edna
Freehling Scholar, and he was elected to membership in the American
Law Institute in 2003. Professor Dinwoodie also holds a Chair in Intellectual Property Law at the University of London, Queen Mary College.
He is presently the Chair of the Intellectual Property Section of the Association of American Law Schools.
Prior to teaching, Professor Dinwoodie had been an
associate with Sullivan and Cromwell in New York,
concentrating in the practice of intellectual property
law and in commercial, corporate, and international
litigation. Professor Dinwoodie holds a First Class
Honors LL.B. degree in Private Law from the University
of Glasgow, an LL.M. from Harvard Law School, and
a J.S.D. from Columbia Law School. He was the Burton
Fellow in residence at Columbia Law School for 1988-89,
working in the field of intellectual property law,
and a John F. Kennedy Scholar at Harvard Law School
for 1987-88.
He is the author of the casebooks International Intellectual Property Law
and Policy (with Hennessey and Perlmutter), International and Comparative
Patent Law (with Hennessey and Perlmutter), and Trademarks and Unfair
Competition: Law and Policy (with Janis). His articles on various aspects of intellectual property
law have appeared in several leading law reviews. He has served as a consultant to the World Intellectual
Property Organization on matters of private international law, to UNCTAD on traditional knowledge
questions, and as an advisor to the American Law Institute project on Jurisdiction and Recognition
of Judgments in Intellectual Property Matters. He teaches courses in Copyright Law, Trademark Law,
International Intellectual Property Law, Conflict of Laws and Civil Procedure.