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Online Course | IP Transactions: Law and Practice 2020

09 November 2020–13 November 2020, 9:00 am–5:00 pm

IP Transactions: Law and Practice 2018

UCL Institute of Brand and Innovation course convened by Mark Anderson (Anderson Law LLP) and Prof. Sir Robin Jacob (UCL)

Event Information

Open to

All

Organiser

UCL Institute of Brand and Innovation Law (IBIL)

Location

UCL Laws, Bentham House, Endsleigh Gardens, London WC1H 0EG

Dates:  9 - 13 November 2020
The course will be held virtually due to COVID-19.
Cost: £3200 + VAT
Application deadline: Friday 23 October 2020.

Drafting, negotiating, interpreting and advising on intellectual property (IP) agreements requires a special set of legal skills.

In addition to understanding relevant provisions of IP law, practitioners need to be familiar with a wide range of commercial law subjects, including personal property, contracts, competition, insolvency, tax, employment, and various areas of regulation, such as data protection and export controls. To advise effectively on IP transactions, it is also necessary to be aware of commercial practice in the relevant industry sector.

The mix of legal and practice issues that transactional IP lawyers face can be very different from those experienced by IP litigators or general company/commercial lawyers.

Understandably, traditional IP law courses focus on a wide range of IP issues such as subsistence, validity, infringement and enforcement, and spend relatively little time on transactional aspects. Commercial law courses may use examples from the field of IP transactions, but tend not to focus exclusively on this area.

Course Structure

Each day of the course focuses on a different market or practice area, provides instruction on legal and commercial topics that are relevant to IP transactions in that area, and gives an introduction to the IP agreements that are encountered.

The topics covered include IP aspects of mergers and acquisitions, information technology contracts, agreements in the life sciences sector, contracts with universities and government bodies, and agreements in the media and consumer goods sectors.

The course as a whole is designed to cover all the main types of IP (including patents, copyright, database rights, registered and unregistered designs, trade marks and confidential information), the main types of IP transaction (including licensing, assignment, sale of IP products, and IP aspects of corporate transactions), and various areas of commercial law that affect all kinds of IP transactions (including competition law, insolvency and tax).

A reading list is provided in advance of the course, so that students can start the course with a core knowledge of relevant IP and contract subjects.

An important aspect of the course is that it is both academically rigorous – to the standards that one would expect from a leading UK law faculty – and, at the same time, very practical in its focus.

Each day of the course includes

  • Lectures on the law. Each lecture is delivered by a lead speaker who is supported by a secondary speaker, who may comment on what the lead speaker is saying, provide examples from their own experience, and generally interact with the lead speaker;
  • Discussions on legal and commercial practice, in a similar format to the lectures on the law; and
  • Practical workshops in smaller groups, each led by an experienced practitioner, where we look at documents that are encountered in the area under discussion (eg draft agreements and due diligence reports).

The course will be information-rich – it will cover a considerable amount of material in the course of a week – but will also have a social side. We will allocate students to study groups that will have the opportunity, at the end of each day, to discuss the next day’s practical workshops.

Approximately three weeks after the course finishes, there will be a two-hour exam, which will give students the opportunity to apply the information they have learnt to a selection of practical questions.

Students who complete the course and pass the exam will receive a Certificate in IP Transactions from the Institute of Brand and Innovation Law at UCL Faculty of Laws.

Feedback from the 2019 course:

  • "I think it was pitched well for both those who may be working in a certain area and those who are not."
  • "The course was really fantastic and I thoroughly enjoyed it."
  • "I will thoroughly recommend this course to others in the future, including future IP lawyers at my firm."
  • "I had a fabulous time and took plenty away with me that I have used."
  • "I thought the organisation, course materials, quality of speakers and facilities were all excellent, many thanks!"
  • "I found it a very useful course and the course material a great reference guide."

Learning Hours

29 learning hours

Who is this course for?

Our course has been designed to focus on the legal and practice issues that are directly relevant to transactional IP practitioners.

The course has a strong focus on the needs of practitioners who are in the early stages of a career in IP transactions. We have assumed that most people attending it will be qualified English solicitors and barristers, typically with between zero and two years’ post-qualification experience, although more experienced practitioners are welcome.

Other IP practitioners, including patent attorneys, trade mark attorneys and licensing executives, will find the course useful, provided they have an understanding of the basic elements of contract law and IP law, and have had some exposure to IP transactions. Overseas practising lawyers who wish to learn more about English law in this area, are also welcome.

The legal aspects of the course focus on English law. We recognise that many IP transactions are international, and that practitioners often have to consider questions of non-English law, in consultation with overseas colleagues.

For this reason, we have included a session on dispute resolution, including choice of law and jurisdiction and, in other sessions, we make occasional reference to differences under other systems of law. At the same time, we intend to avoid diluting the usefulness of the legal content by making it generically “international”.

Entry Requirements

There are no formal entry requirements for the course, but it is designed for IP practitioners as described above. Applicants will be asked to provide a short CV that demonstrates their suitability for entry on the course, including that they are in legal practice in the IP field, and a short personal statement that indicates what they hope to achieve from attending it. We reserve the right to reject any application.

If the course is oversubscribed, we also reserve the right to select the students that we consider to be most suitable

Application

Application deadline: Friday 23 October 2020

Queries

If you have any queries about this course please email Lisa Penfold (Events & CPD Manager, UCL Laws).