Greg Day

Legal Studies Program
Assistant Professor
- Office
-
A402 Moore-Rooker Hall610 S. Lumpkin St.Athens, GA, 30602
- Email Address
- Workgreg.day@uga.edu
Biography
Greg Day is an Assistant Professor of Legal Studies at the Terry College of Business and also holds a courtesy appointment in the School of Law. His research focuses on the intersections of competition, technology, innovation, and privacy. Representative works rely on analyses of antitrust or patent law, or both. One can find his scholarship in journals such as the Iowa Law Review, Fordham Law Review, Washington Law Review, and Alabama Law Review. He is also internationally recognized for his knowledge of the art market and the laws governing it.
Education
- J.D., University of North Carolina School of Law, 2013
- Ph.D., M.A., Political Science, University of Mississippi, 2010
- B.A., Social and Global Studies, Antioch College, 2003
Prior Professional Positions
- Morris, Nichols, Arsht & Tunnell LLP, Associate (M&A, Alternative Entities, Commercial Counseling), 2013-2014
Awards
- 2020 Holmes-Cardozo Distinguished Paper Award
- 2019 Jerry S. Cohen Memorial Fund Writing Award for antitrust scholarship, category award
- 2019 Holmes-Cardozo Award
- 2019 MBAA Distinguished Paper Award, Infracompetitive Privacy
- 2017 SEALSB Junior Scholar Award
- 2015, 2016, 2017 Southeastern Academy of Legal Studies in Business Award for Best Proceedings Paper
- 2013 University of North Carolina School of Law Outstanding Writing Award, Explaining The Art Market’s Frauds, Forgeries, and Thefts (And Why the Art Market Does Not Seem to Care)
Areas of Expertise
- Antitrust Law
- Intellectual Property
- Economics
- Corporate Governance
- Art Law
Selected Publications
Journal Articles
- Are Dark Patterns Anticompetitive?, __ Alabama Law Review __ (forthcoming).
- Colluding Against a Patent, __ Wisconsin Law Review __ (forthcoming).
- Monopolizing Free Speech, 88 Fordham Law Review 1315 (2020).
- Anticompetitive Employment, 57 American Business Law Journal 1 (2020)
- Infracompetitive Privacy, 105 Iowa Law Review 61 (2019) (with A. Stemler)
- Patent Law and the Emigration of Innovation, 94 Washington Law Review 119 (2019) (with S. Udick).
- Patent Inequality, 71 Alabama Law Review 115 (2019) (with M. Schuster).
- Competition and Piracy, 37 Berkeley Technology Law Journal 775 (2018).
- Irrational Investors and the Corporate Inversion Puzzle, 69 SMU Law Review 405 (2016).
- Poverty and the Hidden Economic Effects of Sex Discrimination: An Empirical Study of Inequality, 37 University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law 1183 (2016) (with S. Russo).
- Explaining The Art Market’s Frauds, Forgeries, and Thefts (And Why the Art Market
Does Not Seem to Care), 16 Vanderbilt Journal of Entertainment and Technology Law 457 (2014) (pre-appointment
publication).