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Srividhya Ragavan

Professor Srividhya Ragavan

Professor of Law
BA. LLB (Honors), National Law School of India University, 1994
LL.M, King's College, University of London, 1995
S.J.D, George Washington University, 2007

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Srividhya Ragavan joined the law faculty in 2003 to teach intellectual property law, patent law and the law of contracts. Ragavan's scholarship focuses on the interplay between international trade law and intellectual property issues. Her work emphasizes issues that affect developing nations from embracing the trade regime. Her publications have expounded diverse topics like traditional knowledge, pharmaceutical patenting and agricultural subsidies.

After graduating with a BA. LLB (Honors) from the National Law School of India University in Bangalore, Ragavan received the ODASS Scholarship to pursue her LL.M from King's College, University of London. Ragavan completed her SJD from the George Washington University Law School. Ragavan was the First Texas Instruments Visiting Scholar at the Center for Advanced Study & Research on Intellectual Property at the University of Washington at Seattle.

Prior to joining the University of Oklahoma, Ragavan served as a faculty at the National Law School of India University in Bangalore. Currently, Ragavan serves as a visiting faculty for the IP program at National Academy for Legal Scholarship & Research in Hyderabad, India.

Before pursuing her teaching interests, Ragavan worked in J. Sagar Associates, a New Delhi based law firm, in-housed as a legal counsel for Wipro Industries and worked as a legal consultant for WorldTel India Limited.

Book Chapters - All links open in a new window

  1. Of Plant Variety Protection, Agricultural Subsidies and the WTO, Intellectual Property & Information Wealth by Preager Publications.

    Available at: http://www.greenwood.com/catalog/C8882.aspx
  2. To Sow or Not to Sow - Dilemmas From Creating New Food Rights, Agricultural Biotechnology and Intellectual Property: Seeds of Change, CABI Publishers.

    Available at: http://www.cabi.org/bk_BookDisplay.asp?PID=2003
  3. Protection Of Traditional Knowledge, Indigenous People, The Environment And The Law, Carolina Academic Press, 2004.

    Available at: http://www.cap-press.com/books/1218

Law Review & Articles - All Links open in a new window

  1. Dying to Dine: A Story of the Suicidal Indian Farmers,Jindal Global Law Review, India (forth coming, 2009).
  2. New Paradigms For Protection Of Biodiversity, 13 Journal of Intellectual Property Rights (India), 514 ( 2008).
  3. Patent Judicial Wisdom, 165 National Law School of India Review 20 (2) (2008).
  4. Has India Addressed Its Farmers’ Woes? A Story of Plant Protection Issues (co-authored with Jamie Mayer) (20 Georgetown International Environmental Law Review 97 (2007)).
  5. Of the Inequals of Uruguay, 274 Marquette Intellectual Property Law Review 10 (2006).
  6. The Status of Detainees from the Iraq & Afghanistan Conflicts (co-authored with Michael Mireless Jr), 2 Utah Law Review 619 (2005) .
  7. The Jekyll & Hyde Story of International Trade: The TRIPS Agreement & the US Supreme Court, 38 Richmond Law Review 777 (2004).
  8. A Patent Restriction On 'R & D: Infringers or Innovators, 1 Illinois Journal of Law, Technology & Policy 73 (2004).
  9. AIDS As A Detriment To India Shining: The New Government's Focus on Patents, NALSAR News Letter, NALSAR, India (2004).
  10. Can't We All Get Along? - The Case For A Workable Patent Model, 117 Arizona State Law Journal 200 (2003). (Paper presented at the University of Pennsylvania Law School).
  11. Protection Of Traditional Knowledge, 2 Minnesota Intellectual Property Law Review 1 (2001). (Republished by the Kanchi University, Bio-Informatics Center for Medicinal Plants, India).
  12. The Global South As The Key To Biodiversity And Biotechnology--A Reply To Professor Chen, 32 Environmental Law Reporter 10358 (2001) (pdf).
  13. Biological Diversity: An Indian Perspective on North-South Issues, 6 High Tech. Proc. 225 (2000). (Paper presented at the High Tech. Summit, University of Washington, Seattle).
  14. Patent Amendments In India In The Wake Of TRIPS, CASRIP News Letter (Center for Advanced Studies in Intellectual Prop., Univ. of Washington, Seattle) Vol. 8, Issue I, (2001) at 12. (Republished by the Journal Of Intellectual Property Rights, NALSAR, India).
  15. India: A Safe Haven For Foreign Investment - A Look At Joint Ventures And Laws That Govern Them, with Leela Guttina, Journal of Licensing Executive Society (2002). (Presented at the Licensing & Executive Soc. Meeting, Chicago, Sep. 2002).

Newspaper Interviews - All links open in a new window

  1. A US Judgment that is Relevant to the Novartis Case, The Business Line, India, March 25, 2007.
  2. Three Scenarios that are Latent in the Patent Case, The Business Line, India, March, 13, 2007.
  3. There is No Need to be “Trip”ed by Patents, The Business Line, India, March 14, 2007.
  4. Para IV Filings: The Fight Continues, Modern Pharmaceuticals, India, August 2007
  5. Law as a Prime Career of Choice, Education Plus, The Hindu, January 20, 2007.
  6. Patent Length for a New Molecule, Modern Pharmaceuticals, India, March, 2006.
  7. India can use Flexibilities within TRIPS to solve national issues, Indian Express, Jan 2004.
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