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Below is a list of electronic and print material of particular interest to Trademark practitioners. The list of treatises on the Secondary Souces pages may also be useful.
This treatise is meant for practicing lawyers who need to know how federal courts and relevant administrative agencies analyze the full array of issues that regularly surface in Lanham Act litigation including infringement, dilution, false advertising, trade dress, and counterfeiting. It is available to anyone inside the SLU law library via BloombergBNA's Intellectual Property Resource Center, or to SLU Law faculty and students via their Bloomberg Law account.
This valuable reference gives practitioners complete coverage of all aspects of trademark rights, liabilities and remedies in both traditional and emerging forms of trademark use and abuse. The treatise addresses every aspect of civil infringement remedies available today in federal and state courts. It is available to anyone inside the SLU Law Library via BloombergBNA's Intellectual Property Resource Center, or to SLU Law faculty and students via their Bloomberg Law Account.
This book combines legal expertise with practical insights on all facets of TTAB practice and procedure. In addition to useful practice tips and strategies, each chapter includes a valuable checklist of items that the practitioner should bear in mind during each stage of a Board proceeding.
Organized by practice area, it provides important background and history as well as information on prosecution and litigation for patents; trademark, trade dress, unfair competition, and trade secrets; and copyright. It is an ideal resource for newer practitioners, attorneys with a more general legal practice, and summer interns.
This book is a valuable and practical go-to reference for general practitioners, business lawyers, and corporate counsel who need to quickly learn and understand the intellectual property (IP) issues that arise in various business contexts.
Surveys have become perhaps the standard form of evidence on consumer perception in cases involving trademarks and deceptive advertising. Trademark and Deceptive Advertising Surveys offers practical tools for recognizing and appreciating good survey methodology and distinguishing valuable evidence from its counterpart.