Council Members in this Study Group: 46
This study group may include professors, attorneys, former regulatory officers, and consultants knowledgeable on topics such as law and litigation issues, lobbying, policy and government, elections, antitrust, immigration, intellectual property, and legislation, among others.
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Andrew LipmanPartner & Chair, Telecom, Media & Technology
BINGHAM MCCUTCHEN LLP ![]()
Andrew D. Lipman is Partner and Chair of the Telecommunications, Media and Technology Practice Group at Bingham McCutchen in Washington, DC. He specializes in communications law and related fields, including regulatory, transactional, litigation, legislative and land use. Mr. Lipman represents clients...
Ulises PinPartner
BINGHAM MCCUTCHEN LLP ![]()
Ulises Pin is a Partner in the telecommunications, media and technology practice of Bingham McCutchen in Washington, DC. He represents U.S. and foreign communications companies before the Federal Communications Commission as well as communications regulators in Mexico, Brazil, and Latin American countries....
Partner
ALFARO-ABOGADOS LLC ![]()
Carlos Alfaro is Partner of Argentina-based law firm Alfaro-Abogados. He has advised national-multinational corporations, buy out and investment funds, lending institutions and banks in large infrastructure projects (energy, oil and gas, mining, ports, etc.), regulatory issues (concessions, licenses,...
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HAS THE TIME COME TO SLIM MR. SLIM?
September 28, 2006
Kafkaesque Insanity | www.reforma.com
Seldom will you find a Mexican commentator brave enough to write about Carlos Slim, the third wealthiest person in the world, and the growing Empire he presides (which includes not only the telecomm and IT industries, but also banking and insurance, retail sales, construction, vast realestate holdings,...
September 20, 2006
Perdió México las ventajas de sus TLC (Mexico lost the advantages of its Free Trade Agreements) | www.eleconomista.com.mx
What this article painfully -- but unsurprisingly -- shows is that the wrong domestic policies, regulations and a deficit in telecommunications infrastructure, and the efficient use of information technologies among others, have prevented Mexico from benefiting from its twelve binding Free Trade Ag...