Rafael Pastor
I am a lawyer and consultant from the Pontifical Catholic University of Chile that holds a Master (MSc) of Development Studies from Victoria University of Wellington and a Master of Public Policy from Oxford University.
My career is quite interdisciplinary, bearing over 10 years of experience in management and enforcement of Intellectual Property, domain names, pharma and life science regulatory issues. I currently hold a seat at the Chilean Patent and Trademark Appeals Court (Tribunal de Propiedad Industrial), as well as provide consultancy work for IADB.
Since 2013, I am also a NIC Chile Arbitrator for resolving conflicts in the allocation of second level domain names CL.
The former Undersecretary and Minister (S) of Justice Juan Ignacio Piña appointed me as his Chief of Staff from February 2013 to March 2014.
Additionally, I am currently Professor of Public Administration in the School of Government of the Univerisdad del Desarrollo and Assistant Professor of Public Policy Implementation at the MGPP program of the University of Chile.
In March 2016, I joined Universidad Autonoma's Law School as a reader of Introduction to Economics.
I was appointed as Director of Universidad Central's Las School in December 2016.
My manin interest are: public management and state reform, intellectual property policy, judicial reform, conflict management and transformation, behavioral insights and corporate affairs.
My career is quite interdisciplinary, bearing over 10 years of experience in management and enforcement of Intellectual Property, domain names, pharma and life science regulatory issues. I currently hold a seat at the Chilean Patent and Trademark Appeals Court (Tribunal de Propiedad Industrial), as well as provide consultancy work for IADB.
Since 2013, I am also a NIC Chile Arbitrator for resolving conflicts in the allocation of second level domain names CL.
The former Undersecretary and Minister (S) of Justice Juan Ignacio Piña appointed me as his Chief of Staff from February 2013 to March 2014.
Additionally, I am currently Professor of Public Administration in the School of Government of the Univerisdad del Desarrollo and Assistant Professor of Public Policy Implementation at the MGPP program of the University of Chile.
In March 2016, I joined Universidad Autonoma's Law School as a reader of Introduction to Economics.
I was appointed as Director of Universidad Central's Las School in December 2016.
My manin interest are: public management and state reform, intellectual property policy, judicial reform, conflict management and transformation, behavioral insights and corporate affairs.
less
Related Authors
Danny Pérez Y Soto
London School of Economics and Political Science
Sri Walny Rahayu
Universitas Syiah Kuala
Roberto Rosas
St. Mary's University
Jimena Chi Barrales
Osaka Institute of Technology
Robert Hu
St. Mary's University
Mohammad Towhidul Islam
University of Dhaka, Bangladesh
InterestsView All (17)
Uploads
Papers by Rafael Pastor
This bold trade strategy entails signing and ratifying free trade agreements (FTAs) with as many countries and economic regional blocks as possible. The FTA signed and ratified by Chile with the Unites States of America (US-CL) is the most relevant and wide ranging body of regulations regarding intellectual property rights (IPR) that Chile has ever engaged in, and thus, this FTA has also had am impact on Chilean trademark law.
Drawing from this background, this discussion paper seeks to analyze some regulatory changes that Chile has gone through in regards to trademark filing, since TRIPS and the US-CL are in force, as well as how these modifications are influencing the practice and jurisprudence of Chilean trademark law. Concluding remarks regarding the future of trademark litigation are also signalized at the end of this paper.
Presentaciones by Rafael Pastor
Columnas de opinión by Rafael Pastor
This bold trade strategy entails signing and ratifying free trade agreements (FTAs) with as many countries and economic regional blocks as possible. The FTA signed and ratified by Chile with the Unites States of America (US-CL) is the most relevant and wide ranging body of regulations regarding intellectual property rights (IPR) that Chile has ever engaged in, and thus, this FTA has also had am impact on Chilean trademark law.
Drawing from this background, this discussion paper seeks to analyze some regulatory changes that Chile has gone through in regards to trademark filing, since TRIPS and the US-CL are in force, as well as how these modifications are influencing the practice and jurisprudence of Chilean trademark law. Concluding remarks regarding the future of trademark litigation are also signalized at the end of this paper.