Foreword: a real property lawyer cautiously inspects the edges of intellectual property Carol Rose; Part I. Right of Publicity: 1. Haelan Laboratories v. Topps Chewing Gum: publicity as a legal right Stacey Dogan; 2. Do the French have their own 'Haelan' case? The droit à l'image as an emerging intellectual property David Lefranc; Part II. Dilution: 3. The suppressed misappropriation origins of trademark antidilution law: the Landgericht Elberfeld's Odol decision and Frank Schechter's The Rational Basis of Trademark Protection Barton Beebe; 4. Dilution as unfair competition: European echoes Graeme Dinwoodie; Part III. Geographic Indications: 5. Spanish champagne? An unfair competition approach to GI protection Dev Gangjee; 6. A cognac after Spanish champagne? Geographical indications as certification marks Daniel Gervais; Part IV. Design Protection: 7. The Fashion Originators' Guild of America: self-help at the edge of IP and antitrust C. Scott Hemphill and Jeannie Suk; 8. IP at the edges - protection for fashion: the European experience Annette Kur; Part V. Traditional Knowledge: 9. 'Ka Mate Ka Mate' and the protection of traditional knowledge Susy Frankel; 10. Comments on 'Ka Mate Ka Mate' and the protection of traditional knowledge Silke von Lewinski; Part VI. 'Paracopyright': Technological Protection Measures: 11. Paracopyright - a peculiar right to control access Joseph Liu; 12. The protection of technological measures: much ado about nothing or silent remodelling of copyright? Séverine Dusollier; Part VII. Trade Secrets: 13. A legal tangle of secrets and disclosures in trade: Tabor v. Hoffman and beyond Jeanne Fromer; 14. Patents and trade secrets in England: the case of Newbery v. James (1817) Lionel Bently; Part VIII. Open Innovation: 15. Legal but unacceptable: Pallin v. Singer and physician patenting norms Katherine Strandburg; 16. Physicians as user innovators Stefan Bechtold; Part IX. Limitations: Patent Subject Matter and Scope: 17. Funk forward Ted Sichelman; 18. Patent eligibility and scope revisited in light of Schütz v. Werit and European copyright jurisprudence Justine Pila; Part X. Limitations: Copyright and Trademark Defences: 19. Make me walk, make me talk, do whatever you please: Barbie and exceptions Rebecca Tushnet; 20. Parody and IP claims: a defence? - A right to parody? Robin Jacob.