Christopher S. Yoo
Christopher S. Yoo | |
---|---|
Alma mater | Northwestern University School of Law, UCLA, Harvard University |
Occupation(s) | Professor, University of Pennsylvania Law School |
Christopher S. Yoo is a professor of Law, Communication, and Computer and Information Science at the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and founding director of the Center for Technology, Innovation, and Competition.[1] He is well known for his work on technology law, media law and copyright, in which field he is among the most frequently cited authors.[2] He has written extensively on the regulation of the Internet, the economics of copyright and imperfect competition. Yoo is one of the most vocal skeptics of network neutrality, favoring an alternative approach that he calls "network diversity." He has also studied the history of the unitary executive in the United States.
Education and early career
Professor Yoo got his undergraduate education at Harvard University (cum laude), where he was a National Merit Scholar. He then moved to the Anderson School of Management at UCLA, where he completed the MBA program, and in 1995 he graduated from Northwestern University School of Law (magna cum laude). Following his graduation he clerked for Judge Arthur Raymond Randolph of the United States Court of Appeals and for Supreme Court justice Anthony Kennedy. He has also practiced law with Hogan & Hartson in Washington, DC.
Professional development
From 1999 to 2007, Yoo was a professor at Vanderbilt University Law School. From 2005 to 2007, Yoo directed Vanderbilt's Technology and Entertainment Law Program. During the 2006-07 school year, he was also a visiting professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He accepted an appointment as a full professor of law at Penn beginning in 2007. Yoo also has a secondary appointment at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania,[3] and as of 2010 at the School of Engineering and Applied Science. Since 2005 Yoo has been called ten times to testify before Congress, the Federal Communications Commission, and the Federal Trade Commission. He is a member of the American Law and Economics Association, the Federal Communications Bar Association and the National Asian Pacific American Bar Association.
Selected Publications
Books and book chapters
- Networks in Telecommunications: Economics and Law (Cambridge University Press 2009) (with Daniel F. Spulber)
- The Unitary Executive: Presidential Power from Washington to Bush (Yale University Press 2008) (with Steven G. Calabresi)
- Network Neutrality after Comcast: Toward a Case-by-Case Approach to Reasonable Network Management, in New Directions in Communications Policy 55-83 (Randolph J. May ed., Carolina Academic Press, 2009)
- Network Neutrality and Competition Policy: A Complex Relationship, in Net Neutrality or Net Neutering: Should Broadband Internet Services Be Regulated? 25-71 (Thomas M. Lenard & Randolph J. May eds., Springer, 2006)
Articles in academic journals
- Nonrivalry and Price Discrimination in Copyright Economics, 157 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1801-1830 (May 2009) (with John P. Conley)
- Rethinking Broadband Internet Access, 22 Harvard Journal of Law and Technology 1-74 (Fall 2008) (with Daniel F. Spulber)
- Network Neutrality, Consumers, and Innovation, 2008 University of Chicago Legal Forum 179-262 (October 2008)
- Keeping the Internet Neutral?: Tim Wu and Christopher Yoo Debate, 59 Federal Communications Law Journal 575-592 (June 2007) (with Tim Wu)
- Copyright and Public Good Economics: A Misunderstood Relation, 155 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 635-715 (January 2007)
- Network Neutrality and the Economics of Congestion, 94 Georgetown Law Journal 1847-1908 (August 2006)
- Beyond Network Neutrality, 19 Harvard Journal of Law and Technology 1-77 (Fall 2005)
- Vertical Integration and Media Regulation in the New Economy, 19 Yale Journal on Regulation 171-300 (Winter 2002)