- Steven Wilf
Steven R. Wilf is a Professor of Law at the
University of Connecticut School of Law . He is an expert onintellectual property law, historical jurisprudence, andlegal history . Professor Wilf was born in Philadelphia, and earned his J.D. fromYale Law School and his Ph.D. from the Yale Department of History in 1995. He has been a visiting professor atHebrew University of Jerusalem and DADD guest professor at theFree University of Berlin . He also has held fellowships as John Carter Brown Fellow atBrown University , Fellow in Comparative Legal History at theUniversity of Chicago , Golieb Fellow at theNew York University School of Law , and, most recently, at The Institute for Advanced Studies in Jerusalem. Prior to coming to Connecticut, where he was one of the founders of the Intellectual Property Program, Professor Wilf was alaw clerk for theUnited States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit and taught atChicago-Kent College of Law . [http://www.law.uconn.edu/faculty/swilf/ Steven R. Wilf] , UConn Law faculty profile page] In Intellectual Property law, where he has written on trade secret, trademark, copyright, and patent laws, his work has focused largely on the role of culture in shaping doctrinal legal rules. More recently, he has written on the history of Intellectual Property law. [http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1090336 Steven Wilf, The Making of the Post-War Paradigm in American Intellectual Property Law] ] As in other areas of his legal historical work, he has identified the contingent elements of historical development, and seeks to unpack alternative normative outcomes. Professor Wilf's earlier scholarship examined the late eighteenth-century emergence of a rich vernacular legal language in the area of criminal law, which was intimately connected to American patriot agitation against the British in the course of the American Revolution. He has argued that America's later legal development should be rooted in this formative period rather than in court-based interpretation of the United States Constitution. He addressed the question of how to understand law before a law giving moment in his book, "The Law Before the Law".From his eighteenth-century American scholarship , his study of how pre-Sinai Jewish law was interpreted across two millennia of thinking about the law before the Torah, and his essays on nineteenth-century historical jurisprudence, he is best known for advocating a legal history of the imagination, arguing that legal historians should look at how law was envisioned in all its possibilities, even fanciful constructions of normative principles, rather than simply limit themselves to positive law created by legislatures or courts.
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