Innovation Law and Policy Workshop & Law and Economics Workshop Joint Event
Scott Hemphill
Associate Professor of Law
Columbia Law School
An Empirical Analysis of Genric Drug Entry
Date: Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Time: 4:10 p.m. – 6:00 p.m.
Place: Solarium, Flavelle House, 78 Queen’s Park
Scott Hemphill (J.D., Stanford Law School, 1991; Stanford University, Ph.D. candidate, M.A., 2001; M.Sc., London School of Economics and Political Science, 1997; A.B. Harvard College, 1994) teaches intellectual property law, antitrust law, and law and economics. His scholarship focuses on the balance between innovation and competition established by antitrust law, intellectual property, and sector-specific regulation.
Hemphill is an Associate Professor of Law and Milton Handler Fellow at Columbia Law School. After graduating from Harvard College with an A.B. magna cum laude in 1994, he attended LSE as a Fulbright Scholar, graduating with an M.Sc. in 1997. A Ph.D. candidate at Stanford, he received an M.A. there in 2001. An Articles Editor of the Stanford Law Review, he graduated first in his J.D. class in 2001, as the Nathan Abbott Scholar. Hemphill then clerked for both Judge Richard A. Posner, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit, in 2002-2003, and Justice Antonin Scalia, Supreme Court of the United States, from 2003-2004. He then served as John M. Olin Fellow at Columbia, before joining its faculty in 2006.
www.innovationlaw.org
Sponsored by the Microsoft Law and Information Society Project
For more workshop information, please contact Nadia Gulezko at n.gulezko@utoronto.ca