Abraham Bell

2
Article
75.3
Reconfiguring Property in Three Dimensions
Abraham Bell
Visiting Professor, Fordham University School of Law; Lecturer, Bar Ilan University, Faculty of Law
Gideon Parchomovsky
Professor, University of Pennsylvania Law School; Visiting Professor, Bar Ilan University, Faculty of Law

This Article greatly benefited from comments and criticisms by Ben Depoorter, Lee Anne Fennell, Mark Fenster, Sonia Katyal, Jim Krier, Tom Merrill, Adam Mossoff, Dan Richman, Ed Rock, Carol Rose, Chris Serkin, Peter Siegelman, Henry Smith, Phil Weiser, and participants in the 2007 Property Works in Progress Conference at the University of Colorado Law School.

2
Article
76.2
Private Takings
Abraham Bell
Visiting Professor, University of Connecticut School of Law; Professor, Bar Ilan University Faculty of Law

This Article greatly benefited from comments and criticisms by Jonathan Barnett, Omri Ben-Shahar, Philip Blumberg, Lloyd Cohen, Bob Ellickson, Assaf Hamdani, Henry Hansmann, Christine Jolls, Sonia Katyal, Greg Keating, Dan Kelly, Dan Klerman, Yair Listokin, Tom Merrill, Gideon Parchomovsky, J.J. Prescott, Bob Rasmussen, Roberta Romano, Carol Rose, Alan Schwartz, Peter Siegelman, Henry Smith, Chris Stone, Bill Treanor, Mark Weinstein, and Ben Zipursky; and participants in the Law, Economics, and Organization Workshop at Yale University and the law and economics seminars and workshops at University of Michigan Law School, University of Southern California Gould School of Law, the Bar Ilan University Faculty of Law, and the Tel Aviv University Faculty of Law; and participants in faculty seminars at Fordham University Law School, Brooklyn Law School, University of Connecticut Law School, University of San Diego Law School, Washington University School of Law, University of Illinois Law School and George Mason University Law School. For the central ideas, I am indebted to Fred Schauer and Steven Shavell, without whom this Article would not have been possible. I am also grateful for the financial support of the John M. Olin Center for Law, Economics, and Business at Harvard Law School. All errors, of course, are mine.

2
Article
83.3
The Dual-Grant Theory of Fair Use
Abraham Bell
Professor of Law, Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Law and University of San Diego School of Law.
Gideon Parchomovsky
Robert G. Fuller Jr Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School; Professor, Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Law.

Earlier versions of this Article were presented at the 2015 Intellectual Property Scholars Conference; the University of Pennsylvania Law School Center for Technology, Innovation and Competition’s 2015 Copyright Scholarship Roundtable; a workshop on the Oxford Handbook on Intellectual Property at Tel Aviv University; the Fourth Global Congress on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest at the National Law University, Delhi, India; and the 2015 annual conferences of the Association of Law, Property, and Society and the International Society for New Institutional Economics. This Article greatly benefited from the comments and criticisms of participants in those conferences, as well as from those of Larry Alexander, Shyamkrishna Balganesh, Oren Bracha, Ben Depoorter, Kristelia García, Jane Ginsburg, Brad Greenberg, Paul Heald, Justin Hughes, Roberta Kwall, Orly Lobel, Glynn Lunney, David McGowan, Joseph Miller, Justine Pila, Lisa Ramsey, Terrence Ross, Guy Rub, Matthew Sag, Pam Samuelson, Maimon Schwarzschild, Ted Sichelman, Steve Smith, Horacio Spector, Christian Turner, Chris Wonnell, and Christopher Yoo; and from excellent research assistance from Ananth Padmanabhan. We are especially grateful to Wendy Gordon for critical comments and constructive suggestions and for encouraging us to carefully rethink our original positions.

2
Article
The Dual-Grant Theory of Fair Use
Abraham Bell
Professor of Law, Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Law and University of San Diego School of Law
Gideon Parchomovsky
Robert G. Fuller Jr Professor of Law, University of Pennsylvania Law School; Professor, Bar-Ilan University Faculty of Law

Earlier versions of this Article were presented at the 2015 Intellectual Property Scholars Conference; the University of Pennsylvania Law School Center for Technology, Innovation and Competition’s 2015 Copyright Scholarship Roundtable; a workshop on the Oxford Handbook on Intellectual Property at Tel Aviv University; the Fourth Global Congress on Intellectual Property and the Public Interest at the National Law University, Delhi, India; and the 2015 annual conferences of the Association of Law, Property, and Society and the International Society for New Institutional Economics. This Article greatly benefited from the comments and criticisms of participants in those conferences, as well as from those of Larry Alexander, Shyamkrishna Balganesh, Oren Bracha, Ben Depoorter, Kristelia García, Jane Ginsburg, Brad Greenberg, Paul Heald, Justin Hughes, Roberta Kwall, Orly Lobel, Glynn Lunney, David McGowan, Joseph Miller, Justine Pila, Lisa Ramsey, Terrence Ross, Guy Rub, Matthew Sag, Pam Samuelson, Maimon Schwarzschild, Ted Sichelman, Steve Smith, Horacio Spector, Christian Turner, Chris Wonnell, and Christopher Yoo; and from excellent research assistance from Ananth Padmanabhan. We are especially grateful to Wendy Gordon for critical comments and constructive suggestions and for encouraging us to carefully rethink our original positions.