Home > LAWREVS > WILJ > Vol. 7 > No. 2 (1998)
Washington International Law Journal
Abstract
Japanese jurisprudence has been strongly influenced by German jurisprudence, but this trend is changing because more legal professionals including judges, patent attorneys and patent office examiners study at U.S. Law Schools. Some recent Japanese court decisions reflect this strong influence from U.S. jurisprudence. Particularly, the influence is significant in the field of patent claim interpretation, courts' power to review the validity, parallel importation and patent infringement damages. This article concludes that there are few significant differences remaining between the U.S. and Japanese patent laws, and Japanese courts' eagerness to adopt U.S patent law significantly contributes to harmonizing the remaining differences.
First Page
249
Recommended Citation
Toshiko Takenaka,
Harmonizing the Japanese Patent Sytem with Its U.S. Counterpart Through Judge-Made Law: Interaction Between Japanese and U.S. Case Law Developments,
7 Pac. Rim L & Pol'y J.
249
(1998).
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.law.uw.edu/wilj/vol7/iss2/2