Close
Login to MyACC
ACC Members


Not a Member?

The Association of Corporate Counsel (ACC) is the world's largest organization serving the professional and business interests of attorneys who practice in the legal departments of corporations, associations, nonprofits and other private-sector organizations around the globe.

Join ACC

Search Filters

Discusses the differences between the ways branding, design rights and patents work in Europe and the way they work in the U.S.

A panel of in-house counsel from small, medium, and large departments will share strategies used in developing and monitoring law department budgets. The topics to be discussed include putting in place a plan and a budget, putting in place a fee structure that indents performance, etc.

Discusses emerging approaches for using technology to find the information most important to you, when you need it.

Explores respective roles of FERC and NERC, the status of standards being developed by the ERO and related enforcement developments. Discusses how to determine if your company is a "user, owner or operator" that is subject to the FERC reliability standards and penalties.

Discusses merger reform, the interface of
intellectual property with antitrust laws, data privacy, and spam and
spyware.

This webcast highlights differences in contractual approaches between Europe, Asia and North America and is a must for US counsel who have responsibility for drafting or reviewing international employment contracts.

Using a software license as a case study, this program guides you through the key licensing issues, explains the problems which can arise in major trading jurisdictions in Europe and Asia and gives you practical guidance on how to address them.

Provides a review of the basic legal and practical components for any company undertaking a private offering and provides insights into the important features in any private placement, including a discussion of available registration exemptions, the essential matters to address in offering materials, and aggregation of offerings.

Provides general background information including events preceding the backdating issue and underlying economics and damage issues. Addresses what in-house counsel needs to know and what to expect when the SEC or DOJ want to look at the books, records and files of the company.

Provides guidance on reducing litigation risk for harassment claims and avoiding the retaliation trap.

Subscribe to Program Materials
ACC