Professor Leslie has a degree in economics and political science from UCLA and a
master's in public policy from the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard
University. He graduated from Boalt Hall School of Law, University of California at
Berkeley, where he served as an associate editor on the California Law Review and was
elected to the Order of the Coif. 

After clerking for Judge Diarmuid O'Scannlain on the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals,
he practiced law at Pillsbury Madison & Sutro and Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe
in San Francisco, concentrating on antitrust and complex business litigation. Prior to
joining the faculty of Chicago-Kent, Professor Leslie taught antitrust and corporations
at Boalt Hall. He has been a visiting professor of law at Stanford Law School, the
University of Texas School of Law, and NYU School of Law. 

Professor Leslie's scholarship has appeared in the Texas Law Review, UCLA Law
Review, Minnesota Law Review, Iowa Law Review, William & Mary Law Review, Tulane Law
Review, Indiana Law Journal, U.C. Davis Law Review, Florida Law Review, Wisconsin Law
Review, Harvard Civil Rights-Civil Liberties Law Review and Ohio State Law Journal, among
others. He is the author of the forthcoming casebook Antitrust Law and Intellectual
Property Rights (Oxford University Press). His research focuses on antitrust and business
law. 

Articles

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Patents of Damocles, Indiana Law Journal (2008)
 

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Tying Conspiracies, William and Mary Law Review (2007)
 

Books

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