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Solving of Trade Disputes in a Globalized World
“In a globalized world the subject of international trade disputes becomes a matter which lawyers and also companies must necessarily handle … the spirit that moves us is to develop a greater knowledge of international trade disputes, an indispensable area in global commerce’s invisible infrastructure, and certainly crucial in a country like Chile that is oriented toward exports and international trading of goods and services.”
Gabriela Paiva Hantke–Carlos Cortés Simón Book of Editorial Metropolitana (2004)
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The Necessary Awakening of Intellectual Property in Chile
“…Chile urgently needs to incorporate the building up of a culture that respects intellectual creations into its current agenda. Intellectual property has been incorporated into the new Treaties that Chile has negotiated – European Union, Korea and the United States … Intellectual property is here to stay, with no turning back …”
Gabriela Paiva Hantke, colum in Diario Estrategia (January 2003)
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Intellectual Property in the Agricultural Sector
… The benefits offered by intellectual property must be respected and made the most of, inventing with regard to agriculture all the wealth offered by the intellectual property law and thus increasing the added value and the sophistication of the agroforestry products … Access to new varieties starts with the fulfillment of norms on intellectual property.”
Gabriela Paiva Hantke, Revista El Campesino, Sociedad Nacional de Agricultura (Jan-Febr-March 2002)
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The Register of Domain Names in Chile
“… The difference between the concept of the trademark registration system and that for domain names will inevitably produce conflicts … A system based on the freedom and responsibility of the applicants with mechanisms for the solution of controversies, like that of NIC Chile, contributes towards educating the public and improving the use of and access to Internet by the citizens …”
Gabriela Paiva Hantke, Revista del Abogado, Chilean Bar Association, N° 20. (November 2000)
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Transfer of Technology, Patents and the Relationship between the United States and Japan.
Analyzing the subject of technology and the relationship between Japan and the United States is interesting not only for these two countries but also for the rest of the world … It shows how an opportunity always exists in the world and if other countries should want to follow Japan’s example, they must develop the skill to recognize and benefit from their unique circumstances, as Japan did.”
Gabriela Paiva Hantke, Hiroshima Hogaku, The Hiroshima Law Journal, vol. 17, N° 2 (July 1993)
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