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The latest news from the Asia-Pacific region, with a focus on law firms in Hong Kong, Singapore, China and Australia, as well as emerging markets such as South Korea, Malaysia, Indonesia and more.
By Jessica Seah | March 5, 2024
In less than eight months, Akin Gump, Proskauer Rose and Latham have all closed offices in mainland China.
3 minute read
By Jessica Seah | March 4, 2024
In last eight months, Perkins Coie, Akin Gump, Proskauer Rose and Latham have all closed offices in mainland China.
3 minute read
By Jessica Seah | March 4, 2024
In less than eight months, Akin Gump, Proskauer Rose and Latham have all closed offices in mainland China.
3 minute read
By Lisa Shuchman | March 4, 2024
EU regulators ruled that the Silicon Valley company had breached the bloc's tough antitrust laws by imposing "unfair trading conditions" on music streaming providers in its App Store over a 10-year period.
3 minute read
By Jessica Seah | March 4, 2024
In a meeting with associates, a partner at the firm attributed the firm's decision to market conditions and the size of the team, which is 'too big', a source told Law.com International.
4 minute read
By Christopher Niesche | March 4, 2024
The move follows Facebook's decision to stop paying news organisations in Australia.
3 minute read
By Jessica Seah | February 29, 2024
Chinese law firms are expanding aggressively within China, but top-tier Chinese firms have focused outward to international markets. With the Chinese cross-border deal market growing increasingly quiet, will these firms pivot toward mainland expansion?
6 minute read
By Christopher Niesche | February 27, 2024
Workplace Gender Equality Agency releases pay gap data for first time.
4 minute read
By Jessica Seah | February 22, 2024
Latham & Watkins' decision to block automatic access for its Hong Kong staff to files and documents outside of Greater China was not necessarily wrong. But the way it implemented the change was tone-deaf. The firm's sin was its failure to communicate, writes Jessica Seah in the Asia Legal Briefing.
6 minute read
By Jessica Seah | February 22, 2024
Latham & Watkins' decision to block automatic access for its Hong Kong staff to files and documents outside of Greater China was not necessarily wrong. But the way it implemented the change was tone-deaf. The firm's sin was its failure to communicate, writes Jessica Seah in the Asia Legal Briefing.
6 minute read
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