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72 Emory L.J. 1 (2022-2023)

handle is hein.journals/emlj72 and id is 1 raw text is: 







THE INEQUALITIES OF INNOVATION


                                Colleen V. Chien*

                                   ABSTRACT

    Over  the last few decades, the United  States has become   more  innovative,
but the gains have  been  distributed unequally. In 2020, over 50%   of new  U.S.
patents went  to the top 1%  of patentees, and  more  than 50%  of all patents of
U.S.  origin were  generated  by just five states, all coastal. Less than 13%  of
inventors   were   women. The      economic,   geographic, and      demographic
concentration   of innovation   highlight  how  the  intersections between   two
traditionally  discrete   topics  innovation   and    inequality  have   become
increasingly  relevant. But rather than any single inequality, this Article argues,
multiple  inequalities  of income, opportunity,  and  access  have  relevance  to
innovation.  Examining  the inequalities of innovation, separately and  together,
exposes  the  tensions, at times  surprising, between  notions  of equity. When
mapped   onto patent law, an inequalities framework  also reveals how patent law
can   exacerbate   inequality by  providing   enhanced   returns  to   invention
capital   the role  models,  trust, know-how,  and  networks   required  to take
advantage  of inventing. But an inequalities framework  also shows how  patented
innovation  can  improve   conditions for  the worst-off  by providing  paths  to
prosperity and  hastening the creation and diffusion of innovation across classes,
even  as it makes the rich richer.

    Building  on  the  inequalities framework   described  above,  this Article
offers a set of legal and administrative  proposals  grounded  in patent law  for
addressing  inequality concerns.  To  ensure equal  opportunities to participate,
this Article proposes the creation of an Independent Office of the Small Inventor
Advocate,   akin   to  the  National   Taxpayer   Advocate,   that  would   have
responsibility for outreaching to and increasing invention capital and know-how
among first-time, underrepresented, and under-resourced inventors, and
leveling  up  the  inventing playing  field, for  example   through   universally


(c) Professor, Santa Clara University School of Law and Co-Director, High Tech Law Institute, 2013-2015
White House Senior, Innovation and Intellectual Property. Thanks to Jeanne Fromer, Daniel Hemel, Barton
Beebe, Peter Lee, Lisa Ouellette, Gregory Day, Michael Shuster, Robert Merges, Lateef Mtima, Carol Rose,
Eunice Lee, Mark Lemley, Pam Samuelson, Sonya Katyal, Kali Murray, David Schwartz, Brian Love, Eric
Goldman, Tyler Ochoa, Deep Gulasekaram, David Sloss, Jonah Probell, Michael Risch, and audiences at
multiple faculty forum and legal colloquium, including at MOSAIC, WIPIP, IP Scholars, NYU School of Law,
Santa Clara School of Law, Denver Strum School of Law, Hastings School of Law, and Arizona Law School
for their comments and feedback. Thanks to Erik Perez, Rodney Swartz, Jonathan Collins, Zachary Daly, Stella
Collet, and Nicholas Halkowski for excellent research assistance and to the student editors at the Emory Law
Journal for their patient and careful editing of the article. Thanks as always to Dirk Calcoen.

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