September 11, 2008
Queens, N.Y. (September 11, 2008) -
St. John’s University School of Law has appointed two new
faculty members as part of an initiative to grow its Intellectual
Property program.
Katharina de la Durantaye joins the St. John's faculty as an
Assistant Professor of Law, having previously served as a Visiting
Assistant Professor at Boston University School of Law and as an
Associate-in-Law at Columbia Law School. Professor de la
Durantaye’s scholarship focuses on copyright law, comparative law,
and legal history. Her book The Protection of Literary
Authorship in Ancient Rome was named a “Legal Book of the
Year” by the leading German law journal Neue Juristische
Wochenschrift. She has published articles on the history
of intellectual property law in the Boston University
International Law Journal and in Forum Historiae
Iuris, one of the premier European journals of legal
history.
Jeremy
Sheff also joins the faculty as an Assistant Professor of
Law. He practiced for five years at Cravath, Swaine &
Moore after graduating from Harvard Law School and clerking for
Hon. C. P. Sifton of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern
District of New York. Professor Sheff’s research interests
span Intellectual Property law, First Amendment law, and
Communications/Internet law. In particular, his research
focuses on the use of law to channel the creation, dissemination,
processing and use of information.
The addition of Professors de la Durantaye and Sheff comes as
part of a broader effort to expand the Law School’s intellectual
property offerings. The Law School’s Intellectual Property
curriculum is anchored by a new foundational course, Introduction
to Intellectual Property, and includes expanded course offerings in
each of the three main components of intellectual property law:
copyright, trademarks, and patents.
For more information on the Intellectual Property Program at St.
John’s, please visit the St. John’s School of
Law. For media inquiries, please contact Elizabeth
Reilly, Assistant Director of Media Relations at St. John’s
University at (718) 990-5789 or by e-mail to reillye@stjohns.edu.