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20 - ‘Measuring’ an Academic Contribution

from Part IV - Across Professions

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 March 2020

Graeme W. Austin
Affiliation:
Victoria University of Wellington
Andrew F. Christie
Affiliation:
Melbourne Law School
Andrew T. Kenyon
Affiliation:
Melbourne Law School
Megan Richardson
Affiliation:
Melbourne Law School
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Summary

Given all the circumstances surrounding the attempts to oversee the performance of legal academics and their research efforts, it is remarkable that Sam Ricketson has written and published his treatises on the law of intellectual property (in Australia), the 100-year history of the Berne Convention and the Paris Convention. Hindsight is always 20/20 as noted so frequently by the courts when considering inventiveness and what was obvious at a given prior point in time. it was not obvious at the time of commencing these works that they would be so successful Yet hindsight tells us that Ricketson’s decisions to invest so much of his time and energy into writing his treatises were rational and obvious decisions and the outcomes for both himself and the multiple audiences that enjoy the fruits of his labour equally predictable.

Type
Chapter
Information
Across Intellectual Property
Essays in Honour of Sam Ricketson
, pp. 269 - 279
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

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