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GW Law Library
Research Guides

Trade Secret Law

About Trade Secrets

"A trade secret is information that has economic value from not being known to or readily ascertainable by those who could gain value from its use or disclosure and is the subject of reasonable security measures -- in short, information that is economically valuable because it is kept secret. Some examples of information that have been protected as trade secrets are customer lists; manufacturing methods; chemical processes, formulas, and related equipment; computer program code; marketing data and strategies; blueprints for machines; geological data gained from surveys; and genetic information." (From Intellectual Property: Examples & Explanations.)

Study Aids

Online access: The GW Law Library provides access to the Aspen Learning Library, which includes the Examples & Explanations series and CrunchTime study guides; and the LexisNexis Digital Library, which includes the Understanding and Q&A series. When prompted to login, use your GW Law email address and password.

Print study aids may be borrowed from the Reserve Collection at the Law Library's Circulation/Reserve Desk for up to 2 hours. Older editions may be found in the Law Library stacks. For more study aids in the Law Library's collection, please consult our Study Aids guide.

 

Using the Library Catalog (JACOB)

Search by Subject Headings:

Search by Call # Range:

  • KF 2971 - KF 3198

Search Terms

Potentially useful search terms to be used when searching by keyword within library catalogs, databases, and search engines for information related to trade secret law include:

  • Trade secret
  • Trade secret laws
  • Trade secret legislation
  • Trade secret practice
  • Uniform Trade Secrets Act (UTSA)
  • Economic Espionage Act
  • Defend Trade Secrets Act (DTSA)