NounPlural uncountable Wikipedia has an article on: Property law
From Wiktionary under the GNU Free Documentation License. Property law is the area of law that governs the various form of ownership in real property (land as distinct from personal or movable possessions) and in personal property, within the common law legal system. In the civil law system, there is a division between movable and immovable property. Movable property roughly corresponds to personal property, while immovable property corresponds to real estate or real property, and the associated rights and obligations thereon. The concept, idea or philosophy of property underlies all property law. In some jurisdictions, historically all property was owned by the monarch and it devolved through feudal land tenure or other feudal systems of loyalty and fealty. Though the Napoleonic code was among the first government acts of modern times to introduce the notion of absolute ownership into statute, protection of personal property rights was present in medieval Islamic law and jurisprudence, and in more feudalist forms in the common law courts of medieval and early modern England. From Wikipedia under the
GNU Free Documentation License Do you have to be an engineer or have a special background to get into any field of intellectual property law? Q. I am thinking of getting into intellectual property law, and I have heard that you need to be an engineer or have a science background if you want to work with certain patent or copywright issues. To what extent is this true? I don't have a B.A. in a science-related field. Are there any areas of I.P. law that are still open to people without a science/engineering or computer science background? Hope someone can help, thanks. Asked by mike10 - Thu May 24 13:01:27 2007 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments A. when it comes to the patent law ,u better try a course in commerce.The name of the subject is business law . And property law ,as far as i know is no were concerned with science. If the property law is concerned with checking of the methods used in construction or designs etc. Then u should be a civil Engineer. Answered by Wolf S - Wed May 30 08:21:57 2007 Is school work covered by intellectual property law? Q. There are plenty of examples of intellectual products that are covered by Intellectual Property laws (which vary from country to country, and perhaps even between states). Examples of those can be: music compositions, software, writing, etc. This might also lead to tangent subject such as patentability, but that's beside the subject of this question. On the other hand, I'm under the impression that in academia the researchers don't have exclusive rights over their work. Instead it belongs to the institute. In case of articles published in peer reviewed journals, the authors sign the articles but the property rights are transferred to the publisher; the same happens to books, whose rights are transferred to the publisher given a… [cont.] Asked by Satan Claws - Tue Jun 29 12:27:13 2010 - - 1 Answers - 0 Comments Is Intellectual Property Law in the UK an interesting specialisation for a Lawyer?
Q. Is the majority of the work about: (a) The presumably more arcane task of filing patents and or copyright requests (although this may be more interesting than it would first appear to a lay-person) or; (b) Contending copyright and patent infringement, and debating the limits of IP etcetera. Would this depend on whether you were an in-house lawyer, or whether you had multiple external clients? Does it only get interesting on a large corporate scale? This question is about: intellectual property Law i.e. copyright and patents. NOT physical property law. i.e. houses Asked by sharpy - Thu Oct 25 13:28:04 2007 - - 4 Answers - 0 Comments A. as far as I know property law in the UK is all bout buying and selling houses and would be done by in house lawyers. Several years ago I was a legal secretary and studied paralegal which touched on property buying. Answered by jackie m - Thu Oct 25 13:40:33 2007 From Yahoo Answer Search: "property law" Music and the law keep Adrian Perry busy - UPI.com
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