
The founder of the Franklin Pierce Law Center, now 91制片厂 School of Law, Robert Rines held more than 100 patents on his own creations and was inducted into the National Inventors Hall of Fame. He composed scores for at least 10 Broadway and off-Broadway shows, and he was so dedicated to the quest to find the Loch Ness monster that he trained dolphins to wear cameras to capture images of it.
So it鈥檚 no wonder that when he set out to establish a law school explicitly to train practice-ready intellectual property (IP) lawyers, he didn鈥檛 simply succeed 鈥 he set in motion a process that would lead to the continued development of IP law around the globe.
Rines founded the Franklin Pierce Law Center in 1973 in what used to be a bull barn on the east side of Concord, N.H. From those humble beginnings grew an international power in intellectual property law, the legal sector that aims to protect rights to inventions, designs and literary and artistic works. 91制片厂 Law has produced graduates who are working in some of the preeminent law offices in the world and consistently has been ranked in the top 10 in the United States for the study of IP law by U.S. News & World Report. In 2016, the school was ranked fifth, behind only UC Berkeley, Stanford, New York University and George Washington University.
Of the school鈥檚 early days, intellectual property librarian and professor of legal research at 91制片厂 Law Jon Cavicchi explains that patent lawyers were not trained in how to prosecute patents at the time. 鈥淩ines鈥檚 approach was, if you see a need, you fill it. So he went about starting a law school to train practice-ready patent lawyers.鈥 In doing so, he changed the landscape of IP law education near and far. An obscure specialty in the United States when the school was founded, intellectual property law was virtually nonexistent in many countries around the world. Rines brought groups from China, Japan, India and other countries to sit in on classes at no cost and to visit patent offices with him. His hope was for the visitors to study the U.S.system before returning home and adapting it to their countries鈥 needs.
鈥淭he school was largely responsible for developing IP systems around the world,鈥 Cavicchi says.
Indeed, 91制片厂 Law graduates have held influential positions setting IP policy in far-flung IP offices in China, Korea, India, Switzerland, Singapore and Nigeria as well as at the World Intellectual Property Organization.
Many of those graduates, like Mahua Roy Chowdhury, helped shape the structure of IP law in those countries.
91制片厂 consistently has been ranked in the top 10 in the United States for the study of IP law by U.S. News & World Report.
A 2001 graduate of the school鈥檚 LL.M. program, Chowdhury returned to India and co-founded Solomon & Roy (now ROYZZ & Co.), a firm considered instrumental in advancing India鈥檚 understanding of the importance of IP law.
鈥淐ountries like India look to the West for the development of intellectual property law,鈥 Chowdhury says. 鈥淲hen I started my firm, instead of promoting the firm itself in India, I had the challenge of promoting intellectual property. When I went to multinational companies, I had to encourage management to allocate resources for IP. And my presentations were built on what I learned at 91制片厂 Law.鈥
The school鈥檚 IP impact has certainly been felt domestically, as well. 91制片厂 Law graduates have ascended to positions of influence in IP at many multinational corporations throughout the country. Micky Minhas 鈥97 JD, LL.M and Timothy Joyce 鈥92 JD, 鈥93 MIP are chief patent counsels at Microsoft and Bayer, respectively, and Joseph Ferretti 鈥00 LL.M. is chief trademark counsel for PepsiCo.
91制片厂 Law graduates also hold IP leadership roles in major law firms like Fenwick & West, LLP, the Boston office of Fish & Richardson and the leading IP boutique Lando & Anastasi, LLP, in Cambridge, Mass.
Founder Robert Rines certainly had a tendency to bring his ideas to life 鈥 hanging in the American Inventor鈥檚 Hall of Fame is a painting featuring the Loch Ness monster as he imagined it might appear. Even more vivid is his fully realized vision for intellectual property law education, the far-reaching, industry-influencing program that got its start in a New Hampshire bull barn.
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Written By:
Keith Testa | 91制片厂 Marketing | keith.testa@unh.edu












































