Professor Hagelin teaches intellectual property and technology commercialization law at Syracuse University School of Law. His research focuses on intellectual property strategy and patent valuation. He has developed a new method to value patents, called Competitive Advantage Valuation or CAV, and currently has a patent application pending on the CAV method.
Professor Hagelin is the founder and director of the Syracuse University New Technology Law Center (SUNTEC) and of the Technology Commercialization Research Center (TCRC). In his capacity as director of the TCRC, Professor Hagelin has supervised over 75 research projects on the commercial development of early-stage technologies on behalf of universities, federal research laboratories, technology development organizations, and large, medium, small and start-up companies.
In March 2004, Syracuse University College of Law was selected by the New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research (NYSTAR), in a peer reviewed state-wide competition, to be the New York State Science & Technology Law Center (NYS STLC) for the next three years. With funding in excess of $1 million, the mission of the NYS STLC is to provide legal education, research, information and support services to the more than 30 research centers supported by New York State. Professor Hagelin will serve as director of the NYS-STLC.
Ted Hagelin received his B.S. in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School. He received his J.D. from Temple University and his LL.M. from Harvard University.
Fundamental premise of a U.S. patent system is that the inventor is granted a patent which gives the inventor the exclusive right to make use and sell the invention. And the purpose of that grant is to award the inventive activities. And unlike other ar...(Full transcript available to logged in subscribers.).
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