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The Columbus School of Law at Catholic University
Susanna Frederick Fischer
Associate Professor
fischer@law.edu

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Susanna Frederick Fischer has practiced law on both sides of the Atlantic, as a New York attorney and an English barrister. Her primary areas of practice and her main research interests are intellectual property law, media law and cyberlaw, from a comparative law perspective.

Professor Fischer received her legal education at Merton College, Oxford University, where she received a B.A. in jurisprudence in 1987, and the University of Virginia, where she received a LL.M. in 1995. She also studied at Princeton University, where she was awarded a B.A. in history, magna cum laude, in 1983.

She was called to the Bar of England and Wales in November, 1988. From 1988 to 1989, she was a pupil barrister at two London sets of barristers' chambers and also worked as a law lecturer at London Guildhall University. In 1989 she joined the Chambers of Patrick Milmo QC, 5 Raymond Buildings, Gray's Inn, London, and practiced there until 1994. As a barrister, she represented clients before all levels of English courts and tribunals, including the House of Lords. From 1989 to 1994, she also worked as a legal adviser for News International plc. in London. She was admitted to the New York State Bar in 1996. She spent the next three years practicing intellectual property law at two New York City law firms, Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom LLP and Paul, Hastings, Janofsky & Walker LLP. Professor Fischer joined the faculty of Columbus School of Law in August, 1999, where she teaches civil procedure, comparative law, copyright, and cyberlaw.


JOURNAL ARTICLES:

"Crusading Against the Dinosaurs: A Review of "The Future of Ideas", By Lawrence Lessig", 10 CommLaw Conspectus (2002): 251. 

"Rethinking Sullivan: New Approaches in Australia, New Zealand, and England", 34 George Washington International Law Review (2002): 101.

"Saving Rosencrantz and Guildenstern in a Virtual World?  A Comparative Look at Recent Global Electronic Signature Legislation", 7 Boston University Journal of Science & Technology Law (2001): 229, reprinted in part in Margaret Jane Radin, John A. Rothchild, and Gregory M. Silverman, Internet Commerce: The Emerging Legal Framework (2002): 407.


 

"The Global Digital Divide: Focusing on Children”, 24 Hastings Communications and Entertainment Law Journal 477 (Summer, 2002).
 


OTHER PUBLICATIONS:

"No Need to Fear Abuse", Legal Times (Sept. 9, 2002): 25.


"May the Child Online Protection Act Rely on Community Standards to Identify Material that is Harmful to Minors?" Preview of United States Supreme Court Cases No. 3 (November, 2001): 170.


"Napster: Avoiding Death by Injunction?" CCH Law and Technology 30 (March, 2001): 1.


"Deleting the First? Courts Guard IP Rights, but Limit Expression." Intellectual Property: A Legal Times Magazine (Oct. 16, 2000): 56.