Articles
The Unaffordable Cost of Not Having Positive Rights, A United States Perspective, Charleston L. Rev. (2008)
Warning! Experts May Be Hazardous To Your Health, Dartmouth Law Journal (2008)
Teaching Intellectual Property as a Skills Course , American Justice Law Review (2007)
Students can gain experience in practical skills in substantive courses if professors spend the time...
A Listener’s Free Speech, A Reader’s Copyright, Hofstra Law Review (2007)
Despite the Supreme Court’s repeated use of free speech doctrine to derail media reforms,...
Rebalancing Section 512 to Protect Fair Users from Herds of Mice-Trampling Elephants, or a Little Due Process Is Not Such a Dangerous Thing, Santa Clara Comp. & High Tech. L.J. (2006)
Towards a Feminist Theory of the Public Domain, or The Gendered Scope of United States’ Copyrightable and Patentable Subject Matter, William & Mary J. of Women and the Law (2006)
Feminism does not speak with a single voice. Each voice tells a different story....
Originalism, J.E.M., and the Food Supply, or Will the Real Decision Maker Please Stand Up?, J. of Environmental Law & Litigation (2005)
In 2001, the United States Supreme Court decided that sexually reproduced plants (which include...
Dampening the Illegitimacy of the United States' Government: Reframing the Constitution from Contract to Promise, Idaho Law Review (2005)
Realistic political philosophers working in the United States face a serious problem. The public...
The Democratic Public Domain: Reconnecting the Modern First Amendment and the Original Progress Clause (a.k.a. Copyright and Patent Clause), Jurimetrics (2004)
Dealing with Old Father William, or Moving from Constitutional Text to Constitutional Doctrine: Progress Clause Review of the Copyright Term Extension Act, Loyola of Los Angeles L. Rev. (2002)
What Is Congress Supposed to Promote? Defining ‘Progress” in Article I, Section 8, Clause 8 of the U.S. Constitution, or Introducing the Progress Clause, Nebraska L. Rev. (2002)
The Multiple Unconstitutionality of Business Method Patents: Common Sense, Congressional Choice, and Constitutional History, Rutgers Computer & Tech. L.J. (2002)
Purveyance and Power or Over-Priced Free Lunch: The Intellectual Property Clause as an Ally of the Takings Clause in the Public’s Control of Government, Southwestern Univ. L. Rev. (2001)
Opt-In Government: Using the InterNet to Empower Choice – Privacy Application, Catholic Univ. L. Rev. (2001)
The Owned Public Domain: The Constitutional Right Not To Be Excluded – Or the Supreme Court Chose the Right Breakfast Cereal in Kellogg v. National Biscuit Co., Hastings Comm/Ent (2000)
The Right to Know?: Delimiting Database Protection at the Juncture of the Commerce Clause, the Intellectual Property Clause, and the First Amendment, Cardozo Arts & Ent. L.J. (1999)
The Underfunded Death Penalty: Mercy as Discrimination in a Rights Based System of Justice, UMKC L. Rev. (1998)
Prayer in Public Schools: Without Heat, How Can There Be Light?, or Narrative as the Reasonable Way to Discuss the Arational. Report on the Second Annual Law Day Symposium Jointly Sponsored by the Center for First Amendment Rights and the University of Connecticut School of Law, Quinnipiac L. Rev. (1996)
Time to Dilute the Dilution Statute and What Not to Do When Opposing Legislation: Beyond a Comment on Professor Port's The "Unnatural" Expansion of Trademark Rights: Is a Federal Dilution Statute Necessary?, J. Pat. & Trademark Off. Soc’y (1996)
Unconstitutional Incontestability?: The Intersection of the Intellectual Property and Commerce Clauses of the Constitution: Beyond a Critique of Shakespeare Co. v. Silstar Corp., Univ. of Seattle L. Rev. (1995)
A Rose Is a Rose Is a Rose--But Is a Costume a Dress?, J. Copyright Soc’y of the U.S.A. (1994)
Your Image Is My Image: When Advertising Dedicates Trademarks to the Public Domain--With an Example from the Trademark Counterfeiting Act of 1984, Cardozo L. Rev. (1993)
The Author in Copyright: Notes for the Literary Critic (with Monroe Price), Cardozo Arts & Ent. L.J. (1992)
Intellectual Property Protection for the Creative Chef, or How to Copyright a Cake: A Modest Proposal, Cardozo L. Rev. (1991)
Books
Contributions to Books
The Unaffordable Cost of Not Having Positive Rights, A United States Perspective (in English, published in Portuguese), DIREITO FUNDAMENTAIS, ORÇAMENTO E RESERVA DO POSSÍVEL (The Cost of Rights) (2008)
Despite the high value of advanced economic theory and the enviable wealth of the United...