Associate Professor Daryl Lim, Director of the Center for Intellectual Property, Information & Privacy Law at The John Marshall Law School, participated in two panels at Fordham University School of Law’s 25th Annual Intellectual Property Law & Policy Conference this week in New York.
Known as “the Davos of the IP world,” the annual Fordham IP conference is an international gathering of leading intellectual property lawyers, professors, practitioners and in-house counsel. The two panels Professor Lim participated in were “Pharma, IP & Competition,” and “FRAND/Standard Essential Patents.”
Lim is considered a leader in the fields of antitrust and patent law. His book “Patent Misuse and Antitrust Law: Empirical, Doctrinal and Policy Perspectives” has been lauded in “World Competition Law and Economics Review,” a leading journal focusing on competition law. His book has been cited by the U.S. Supreme Court by lawyers for both sides in their briefs in Kimble v. Marvel Enterprises, Inc., a case concerning post-expiration patent royalty payments. He has written more than 30 articles and participated in nearly 70 conferences and talks.
Professor Lim’s work also has been cited in several reports, including those by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, the World Intellectual Property Organization and the Canadian government. He became director of John Marshall’s intellectual property law program in October 2015.