Abstract
This Article is the first to empirically examine the extent to which women and minorities succeed in prosecuting trademark applications before the United States Patent and Trademark Office (“USPTO”). Trademark registration is an important measure of entrepreneurial activity and progress in business, education, and the arts. To explore how women and minorities are succeeding in this domain, we compared 1.2 million trademark applications over thirty years with demographic information on race and gender. We analyze whether trademark prosecution reflects systematic underrepresentation of women and minorities similar to those reported in patent and copyright prosecution. We found that trademark data showed significant differences from the other two federal intellectual property (“IP”) regimes. Our analysis reveals that women regularly secure trademark registration at a higher rate than men. Women are underrepresented in the pool of trademark applicants compared to their presence in the population, but not all minority groups are underrepresented. For women and underrepresented minorities, the disparity is decreasing at a rate not seen in other IP registration systems. While recent work has significantly advanced our understanding of trademark prosecution, no published studies consider the race and gender of trademark applicants. By filling that void, this Article substantially contributes to our understanding of minority intellectual property ownership and provides a new foundation for policy shifts and further research to assure that intellectual property ownership paths, theory, law, and reform are grounded in equality.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 1407-1466 |
Number of pages | 60 |
Journal | Southern California Law Review |
Volume | 94 |
Issue number | 6 |
State | Published - 2021 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2021 University of Southern California. All rights reserved.
Funding
manuscript. We would like to thank Dr. Sung-Hou Kim for providing us with original figures from his publication and permitting us to use them, and Dr. Sara Jones for creating several of the figures presented in this review. Work from this laboratory described in this review was supported by grant CA41086 from the National Institutes of Health.
Funders | Funder number |
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National Institutes of Health |