Justice O'Connor's Intellectual Property Opinions: Currents and Crosscurrents

January 1991

Justice O'Connor's Intellectual Property Opinions: Currents and Crosscurrents
ITEM DETAILS
Type: Law review article
Author: Marci A. Hamilton
Source: Women's Rts. L. Rep.
Citation: 13 Women's Rts. L. Rep. 71 (1991)

Other pages in the O'Connor Institute Online Archive mentioned in this article:

NAME / TITLETYPE
Marci A. HamiltonLaw Clerk

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Justice O'Connor's Intellectual Property Opinions: Currents and Crosscurrents*

by

MARCI A. HAMILTON**

On this tenth anniversary of Justice Sandra Day O'Connor's tenure on the United States Supreme Court, it is fitting, though arguably pre mature, for us to ask the question: how will we remember Justice O'Connor's contribution to the Court years from now? Justice O'Connor undeni ably has made important and interesting contri butions to the Court's ongoing debate over issues involving the First Amendment, abortion, and federalism. She has developed a distinctive juris prudence in her Establishment Clause opinions and a striking voice in her affirmative action opinions.1 Probably few realize, however, that in the last several years she also has become a force in the intellectual property area, especially the copy right arena. Justice O'Connor has authored the Court's major intellectual property opinion for each of the last three terms. Since 1985, she has authored four of the Court's intellectual property opinions. Given that the Court only grants certi orari for one to two such cases each year, her con tribution accounts for a substantial percentage of the Court's recent intellectual property jurisprudence. Thus, we may learn a great deal about the direction of the Court in this area if we examine her writings in detail.

Her opinions in Harper & Row Publishers, Inc. v. Nation Enterprises,2 Bonito Boats, Inc. v. Thunder Craft Boats, Inc.,3 Stewart v. Abend4, and

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