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The Doctrinal Structure of Patent Law’s Enablement Requirement

Posted by on Monday, November 28, 2016 in Articles, Volume 69, Volume 69, Number 6.

The Doctrinal Structure of Patent Law’s Enablement Requirement

ABSTRACT

This Article examines the formal law of enablement, focusing on a perceived split in the enablement doctrine: whether disclosure of a single mode of an invention is necessarily sufficient to satisfy the requirement of enablement or whether the full scope of the claim must be enabled. In examining this split, this Article articulates the enablement inquiry in conceptual terms, identifying two elements of the courts’ analyses that are implicit in every enablement determination: the nature of enablement disputes as challenges and the articulation of a target or targets that must be enabled. With this understanding in mind, the “full scope” and “any mode” language are easily reconciled: For any given target, one mode suffices. But each and every target must be enabled.

AUTHOR

Professor of Law, University of Iowa College of Law.