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Susan Scafidi

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Residence
  
New York, NY

Education
  
Yale Law School

Role
  
Lawyer


Name
  
Susan Scafidi

Website
  
CounterfeitChic.com

Books
  
Who owns culture?

Susan Scafidi Susan Scafidi Pictures First Annual Fashion Law

Occupation
  
President, Fashion Law Institute Professor, Fordham University School of Law

Alumna susan scafidi returns to duke


Susan Scafidi is an American lawyer, legal scholar, advocate, nonprofit executive, and commentator. The first professor to offer a formal course on fashion law at a U.S. law school, she is the founder and president of the Fashion Law Institute, a nonprofit organization located at the Fordham Law School in New York City.

Contents

Susan Scafidi Role Call Susan Scafidi Professor of Fashion Law

Scafidi is a frequent commenter on fashion and fashion law, with appearances in the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Women's Wear Daily, Forbes Time, Newsweek, Crain's New York Business, the Chicago Tribune, National Public Radio, Today, CBS This Morning, 20/20, The Tyra Banks Show, and other media outlets in the U.S. and abroad. She is also known for her work on cultural appropriation.

Susan Scafidi www2pictureszimbiocomgiFashionLawInstitute

Fashion law pioneer

Susan Scafidi Alumna Susan Scafidi Returns to Duke YouTube

Scafidi is credited with being the "pioneer," "innovator" and "senior stateswoman" of fashion law as a distinct legal field.

Susan Scafidi Susan Scafidi Zimbio

In 2005, Scafidi launched CounterfeitChic.com. In addition to discussing examples of originality and copying in fashion, Scafidi used the site to call for a cultural analysis of fashion design protection. Scafidi's work in Counterfeit Chic has been cited as the inspiration for subsequent fashion law sites. The American Bar Association has recognized Counterfeit Chic as a top 100 law blog, and Counterfeit Chic has also received attention in multiple media outlets, including the New York Times, ABC News, and The Tyra Banks Show.

Susan Scafidi Fordham Fashion Law Institute Ribbon Cutting Fashion Law

Scafidi was the first law professor to advocate for recognizing fashion law as a distinct legal field. Besides writing and speaking on the subject, she offered the first course on fashion law.

Fashion Law Institute

In 2010, with the support of Diane von Furstenberg and the Council of Fashion Designers of America, Scafidi founded the Fashion Law Institute, the world's first academic center dedicated to legal and business issues pertaining to the fashion industry. In 2015, Diane von Furstenberg and Scafidi announced the launch of the world's first master's degrees in fashion law: a Master of Laws for attorneys and a Master of Science in Law for designers, executives, and other non-attorney members of the fashion community.

Advocacy for fashion design protection

Scafidi has been a leading proponent for the enactment of intellectual property protection for fashion design. In 2006, she testified before the House Judiciary Committee in favor of the bill now referred to as the Innovative Design Protection Act, which she helped draft. She has continued to speak about the bill and to provide updates on its progress in Congress.

Model Alliance

Scafidi was a founding board member of the Model Alliance, which was formed after Scafidi approached model advocate Sara Ziff to discuss organizational strategy after a showing of Ziff's documentary, Picture Me. Scafidi and Fashion Law Institute assisted with the drafting and enactment of a New York state law that established legal safeguards for models under the age of sixteen. Scafidi described this legislation as "one of the biggest developments in a century, bringing a whole new group under legal protection."

Cultural appropriation

Scafidi is the author of Who Owns Culture?, a study of cultural identity in the contemporary marketplace. Scafidi's work on cultural appropriation and ethnographic legal history has been cited in a range of scholarly articles. As she explained in a January 2006 talk at the annual meeting of the Association of American Law Schools, Scafidi's work in both cultural appropriation and fashion grew out of an interest in forms of creativity that the law does not protect and the values implicit in this status, in contrast to other academics' focus on works with extensive and increasing intellectual property protection. Scafidi's work on cultural appropriation has also been cited in public debates over the use of culture in fashion, such as the Urban Outfitters' Navajo panty and the use of Native American garb in the 2012 Victoria's Secret Fashion Show.

Education and Academic Career

A native of Washington D.C., Scafidi received her B.A. of Duke University and J.D. from Yale Law School. She also did graduate work in history at the University of California-Berkeley and the University of Chicago.

After graduation from Yale, she clerked for the Honorable Morris Arnold, a federal judge on the Eighth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals.

Scafidi's first law teaching position was at the University of Chicago. She subsequently joined the faculties at the St. Louis University School of Law and the Dedman School of Law at Southern Methodist University, where she received tenure. Prior to becoming a law professor at Fordham Law School, she also taught in the law schools at Georgetown and Yale.

Selected writing

  • Counterfeit Chic
  • Who Owns Culture? Authenticity and Appropriation in American Law, 2005. ISBN 0-8135-3606-5.
  • "Intellectual Property and Fashion Design," in Peter Yu, ed., Intellectual Property and Information Wealth, vol. 1, p. 115 (2006).
  • "Fiat Fashion Law! The Launch of a Label--and a New Branch of Law, in Navigating Fashion Law (2012)
  • "F.I.T. Fashion as Information Technology," in Syracuse Law Review, Vol. 59, p. 69 (2008)
  • "Knock it off! Quashing design pirates" (with Narciso Rodriguez) Chicago Tribune, 29 August 2010.
  • References

    Susan Scafidi Wikipedia