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Patent Injunctions, Economics, and Rights

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  • Adam Mossoff
  • Eric R. Claeys

Abstract

Richard Epstein has long defended classical liberalism, property rights, and private ordering, including the presumption that a patent owner deserves an injunction against ongoing infringement. We agree with Epstein that injunctions should be a presumptive remedy for infringement, but we have reservations about his consequentialist, law and economics justification for this position. Law and economics justifications struggle to explain why the state may use coercion and the implied threat of force to enforce policies written into law. By contrast, rights-based justifications can supply such an explanation, and we illustrate by showing how a Lockean theory of rights based in a metaethics of flourishing (eudaimonism) justifies both a patent and an injunctive remedy for violations of a patent. We also address misconceptions that Epstein and other consequentialists hold toward rights-based justifications: that such justifications make policy prescriptions without considering social consequences and that they are not as determinate as consequentialist justifications.

Suggested Citation

  • Adam Mossoff & Eric R. Claeys, 2021. "Patent Injunctions, Economics, and Rights," The Journal of Legal Studies, University of Chicago Press, vol. 50(S2), pages 129-149.
  • Handle: RePEc:ucp:jlstud:doi:10.1086/705135
    DOI: 10.1086/705135
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