Intellectual Property in an Innovation Economy
How IP is a property right, how it functions as a property right in a free market, and how legally, historically, and economically, IP is essential to a thriving economy and flourishing society.
How Intellectual Property is a property right, how it functions as a property right in a free market, and how legally, historically, and economically, Intellectual Property is essential to a thriving economy and flourishing society.
Produced by Shaun King, Duke University Department of Political Science Communications Specialist.
Mr. Mossoff is a professor of law at Antonin Scalia Law School at George Mason University. He is a Visiting Intellectual Property Fellow in the Edwin Meese III Center for Legal and Judicial Studies at The Heritage Foundation, a Professor of Law at the Antonin Scalia Law School of George Mason University, and a Senior Fellow at the Hudson Institute.
His scholarship has been relied on by the Supreme Court, by federal courts, and by federal agencies, and he has been invited numerous times to testify before the Senate and the House of Representatives on proposed intellectual property legislation.
Visit his website at adammossoff.com.
The views represent those of the author and not necessarily those of Capitalism Magazine.
RELATED ARTICLES
World IP Day: Economic Benefits of Intellectual Property
Films and video games aren’t the only things threatened by piracy. Patents for innovative inventions and life-saving medications also stand at risk.
Patent Rights: Life, Liberty and Intellectual Property
The Founding Fathers’ moral achievement in securing patents and other intellectual property rights in U.S. law.
The Patent Eligibility “Quagmire”
If the United States is to retain our innovation edge, patent eligibility doctrine must be returned to the “anything under the sun that is made by man” standard.
The U.S. Founders’ Inventive Constitutional Brilliance
This Constitution Day, thank the Founders for stimulating ingenuity by applying “the fuel of interest to the fire of genius.” And while you’re at it, thank an inventor.


