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November 2012

Slot charter should benefit under tonnage tax scheme

By Ranjeet Mahtani and Stella Joseph, Economic Laws Practice

India’s retail mystique: the single-brand aspect

By Gautam Khurana, India Law Offices

Misplaced optimism spurs easier spectrum fee loans

By Sawant Singh and Davis Kanjamala, Phoenix Legal

Pro-consumer bill aims to regulate builders in India

By Amitabh Chaturvedi and Ekta Sukhramani, Mine & Young

Options for squeeze-out of minority shareholders

By Puja Sondhi and Mayank Vikas, Amarchand Mangaldas

Target advertising raises some crucial legal issues

By Shubneet Panjete, Lall Lahiri & Salhotra

Are investment treaties worth the political risk?

By Shardul Thacker, Mulla & Mulla & Craigie Blunt & Caroe

Indian ports sector: sailing through choppy waters

By Akshay Jaitly and Megha Kaladharan, Trilegal

Deposit forfeiture ruling boon for real estate sector

By Vivek Vashi and Aditya Sikka, Bharucha & Partners

Saskatchewan updates law on oil and gas conservation

By Patrick Maguire, Marie Buchinski and Chuck Davies, Bennett Jones LLP

Loopholes set to undermine new empowerment regime

By Safiyya Patel, Webber Wentzel

Legal Process Outsourcing Awards 2012

The winning LPO service providers of 2012

Parental control

Foreign companies need to put at least one share of their Indian subsidiaries in other hands

A sleeping giant

A losing battle?

Delays and high costs dash dispute resolution hopes

Bleak prospects

Correspondents

Test pass cat TRID [EN]

Post Cat Test 5

Post Test Cat 4

Practitioner’s perspectives

harmful content to children intermediaries

Zero tolerance on inaction by intermediaries regarding content harmful to children

By Pravin Anand, Vaishali Mittal and Siddhant Chamola, Anand and Anand

Managing founder disputes in startups

By Nitu Agarwal, YNSS Law Offices
global privacy law

Navigating global privacy laws: Best practices

By Sreenidhi Srinivasan and Mayank Takawane, Ikigai Law

Vantage point

Seen to be green

As environmental consciousness grows, using green catchphrases can be tempting for companies to mislead consumers

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