Nelson Dong
Nelson Dong is a partner in the Seattle office of Dorsey & Whitney
LLP, a 650-attorney international law firm. He represents technology
companies in venture capital financing, technology transfer
and distribution agreements and other domestic and international
technology and intellectual property transactions. He has substantial
experience in counseling e-commerce, semiconductor, electronics,
computer hardware and software, and biomedical and biotechnology
companies with special expertise in domestic and international
technology licensing and U.S. export control matters. He is
also co-chair of the firm’s Internet and E-Commerce Legal
Practice Group.
He has frequently written about intellectual property law,
U.S. export control law, technology-related business transactions
between the U.S. and Asian or European countries, international
strategic alliances, the Exon-Florio law on foreign investments
in U.S. technology companies, university-based technology transfer,
academic entrepreneurship, academic conflicts of interest and
the financing and organization of high technology businesses.
He has lectured on such topics throughout the United States
and in Austria, Canada, England, the Netherlands, Hong Kong
and the People’s Republic of China.
He served as a member of the President’s Export Council
Subcommittee on Export Administration, the nation’s highest
advisory group on U.S. export control policy (1999-2001). He
has been active in the American Bar Association’s Section
of International Law and Practice and previously served on
the Executive Committee of the California State Bar’s
Section on International Law. Nelson has been President of
the TechLaw Group (1996-98), an international consortium of
leading law firms that serve high technology clients.
Nelson also served as an Assistant U.S. Attorney in Boston,
Massachusetts (1980-82); Deputy Associate Attorney General,
Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. (1979-80); and White
House Fellow and Special Assistant to U.S. Attorney General
Griffin B. Bell, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. (1978-79).
He received his J.D. from Yale Law School (1974) and his A.B.
in economics from Stanford University (1971). He has been a
member of the Stanford University Board of Trustees (1978-82). |