On February 9, Professor Hillary Greene will present 'The Role of the Competition Community in Promoting Innovation" at an international conference at Nagoya University entitled International Issues Relating to a Pro-Innovation Patent System and Competition Policy.

Greene is an associate professor of law and director of the Law School's Intellectual Property and Entrepreneurship Law Clinic. Her most recent publications include:  "Antitrust Censorship of Economic Protest," (59 Duke L. J. 1037 (2010)) and "Non-Per Se Treatment of Buyer Price-Fixing in Intellectual Property Settings" (Duke L. & Tech. Rev., forthcoming). Additional publications include "Guideline Institutionalization: The Role of Merger Guidelines in Antitrust Discourse" in the William and Mary Law Review (2006), and "Articulating Trade-Offs: The Political Economy of State Action" in the Utah Law Review (2006). Prior to teaching, Greene served as project director for Intellectual Property in the Federal Trade Commission's Office of the General Counsel and as a litigation associate at Cahill Gordon & Reindel in New York City. She is admitted to practice in New York, and before the U.S. Supreme Court and the U.S. District Court, Eastern District in New York. Greene currently serves on the advisory board of the American Antitrust Institute.




Additional Homepage Highlights


  • The Law School's Intellectual Property and Entrepreneurship Law Clinic provides students with the unique opportunity to counsel Connecticut's innovators on an extensive range of intellectual property and business law issues.

  • Professor Jessica Rubin will be teaching US law and legal writing for the Open Society Foundation at Bilgi University in Istanbul. Rubin teaches legal research and writing in the Lawyering Process program at the Law School.

  • It's not too late for Summer Term! The Law School offers classes in both June and July sessions. Registration is now open for the July session.

  • On June 18, Professor Sara Bronin will make a presentation at the annual meeting of the Connecticut Bar Association on "Legal Tools to Address Climate Change" at a panel discussion entitle "Following the Path of the Storm: Legal and Legislative Challenges in Addressing Rising Sea Levels on the Connecticut Coastline."

  • On June 17, Professor Richard Pomp will speak at the twenty-third annual Summer Tax Institute at University of California - Davis.

  • On June 18, Professor Mark W. Janis will lecture on "Freedom of Religion and European Human Rights Law" at the University of Oxford, England.