Asia Business Law Journal - March/April 2020




Asia Business Law Journal – March/April 2020

Volume 4, Issue 5

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Highlights:

Lines are drawn

Fighting enemies new and old

The COVID-19 pandemic has brought war analogies to our living rooms and the whole world is now a “battlefront” with governments taking decisions on a “war footing”; and civilians going about their duties are our “brave heroes” on the “front lines” of this fight.

The rhetoric has co-opted us all as willing soldiers in this protracted struggle to save lives, secure our livelihoods, steady our businesses, revive our economies and bring back normalcy. However, the post-pandemic world will be decidedly different, a “new normal” that offers fresh opportunities and unheard-of challenges.

In our Cover Story, we try to make sense of the policy changes by various governments in the Asia-Pacific region, and explain what they mean for businesses, especially ones that operate across markets. Unprecedented policies coupled with the peculiar nature of the crisis make the way forward a tightrope walk for governments in both developed and developing economies.

Given the novel nature of the crisis, policymakers have resorted to a variety of fiscal and policy measures and, without the luxury of being able to resort to a tried and tested emergency playbook, a lot of the measures taken have been unorthodox, with long-term impacts difficult to predict.

In Home and safe? Jim Fitzsimmons, a cybersecurity expert at Control Risks, helps us understand the risks posed to business as companies are forced to implement work-from-home policies. Many companies have quickly adopted cloud-based productivity tools to support a suddenly remote workforce. In the rush to adapt, however, companies have become increasingly concerned about the overall cybersecurity of this approach to working.

For many years, cybersecurity was based on a perimeter security model: Protecting an organization’s information and computers was predicated on isolating them from external access. Computers could connect to the internet on the “outside”, but, in principle, no connections from the outside were let in. But when everyone is working from home, they are all on the “outside”, and this old security model is poorly suited to a mobile workforce.

Even as modes of working and the nature of offices evolve and adapt to a new order, there are a few things that refuse to change – the patriarchal structures that underpin our societies and businesses is one. In Power & parity, we chronicle the unfortunate commonalities and universals still hindering the progression of women lawyers in Asia and around the world. The business community in Asia is still predominantly male-driven, and discrimination against women is common.

“What’s been the real challenge is the unspoken expectations,” says Stefanie Yuen Thio, joint managing partner at TSMP Law in Singapore.

“You have to be every inch a professional, and very much a lady. Stand up to your male counterpart, but don’t lose your femininity. You must be able to carry as many documents as they can, and walk as fast; but you must do it in 3-inch heels and a smart pencil-skirt suit because that’s how women project professional credibility.”

However, women are disrupting these patriarchal structures and claiming their rightful place, from Australia to Pakistan. We talk to 14 women leaders in the region’s legal industry who are becoming role models and improving the prospects for younger women lawyers.

In our Head 2 Head series, we bring to you a detailed look at two hot and emerging areas of jurisprudence in the region – cybersecurity laws and cryptocurrency regulations. In the cybersecurity series, we give you a comparison of regulations in China, India, Indonesia and Taiwan, while the cryptocurrency series explains the latest developments on the topic in India, South Korea and Thailand.

This issue also brings to you the Indonesia A-list, with profiles of the country’s top 100 lawyers. And finally, we also offer a directory of law firms in the Philippines.

Best wishes,

Mithun Varkey
Editor, Asia Business Law Journal
Managing Editor, Vantage Asia

In this issue
top 100 lawyers

The A-List 2020: Indonesia

Asia Business Law Journal reveals the top 100 lawyers practising in Indonesia

For better or worse: The legal limits of comparative ads

By Tusha Malhotra and Pankhuri Malik, Anand and Anand

Millions are spent every year by companies on comparative advertising, and many times these advertisements are taken down due to claims of disparagement.

Tatva Legal opens office in AP: Tatva Legal sees promise in the Andhra Pradesh region and has opened an office in Vijayawada in proximity to its existing Hyderabad office.

Legal news in brief

First in line

A detailed analysis of Taiwan’s intellectual property regime: Trademark protection is obtained through registration and Taiwan follows the first-to-file system

ACL

ACC develops COVID-19 resource hub

The Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) has developed a range of resources to assist the global in-house community in guiding their organizations through the crisis

cybersecurity

Cybersecurity

Data protection and cybersecurity are evolving areas of regulation in Asia. Here, experts shed light on emerging jurisprudence in the region’s top jurisdictions

Levelling the field

The career growth of a female lawyer is often challenged by difficult work-life balance choices, leadership bias, a lack of opportunity for dialogue and debate, and stagnant workplace cultures

contracts

Pandemics, police power and private contracts

By Samantha Beatrice P King, ACCRALAW

Under the Bayanihan Act, the president is empowered to order private establishments to direct their operations towards COVID-19 efforts.

covid

Counterpunch!

With COVID-19 raging across the region, governments are trying to avoid knockout blows for their territories as they counter with life or death policy moves and decisions affecting business survival

IP

A contemporary IP regime

A lot of changes are underway to strengthen the intellectual property (IP) system in India. This article captures a snapshot of several initiatives made in this direction

home

Home & safe?

With COVID-19 forcing companies to implement work-from-home policies, Jim Fitzsimmons helps us understand the cybersecurity risks posed by a remote workforce

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