U.S. Supreme Court,
Intellectual Property,
Civil Litigation
Apr. 18, 2018
The brave new world of patent law
The frequency with which the U.S. Supreme Court has, in recent years, been changing patent law is dizzying, and the court often departs from long-settled Federal Circuit precedent.





Andrea Jill Weiss Jeffries
Partner
Jones Day
Email: ajeffries@jonesday.com
Stanford Univ Law School; Stanford CA
Andrea is a partner in the IP Practice in the firm's Los Angeles office. She has handled formidable intellectual property disputes involving patents, trade secrets, and other forms of IP for more than 20 years.

Steven J. Corr
Partner
Jones Day
555 S Flower St 50FL
Los Angeles , California 90071
Email: sjcorr@jonesday.com
Loyola Law School; Los Angeles CA
Steven is a partner in the IP Practice in the firm's Los Angeles office.

Jennifer Swize
Partner
Jones Day
Phone: (202) 879-5417
Email: jswize@jonesday.com
Jennifer's practice focuses on appellate and complex civil litigation, with a particular emphasis on patent cases including Federal Circuit appeals and patent trials in numerous district courts.

Daniel Kazhdan
Daniel Kazhdan, Ph.D. focuses his practices on intellectual property, with an emphasis on chemical, pharmaceutical, and biotechnology litigation.
The frequency with which the U.S. Supreme Court has, in recent years, been changing patent law is dizzying. Though the court's pronouncements serve to cement doctrines for cases going forward, their departure from long-settled precedent of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit is disrupting settled expectations, creating uncertainty and spawning follow-on litigation. Now more than ever, businesses that are involved with patents need sophisticated strategie...
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