Law Practice Specialties

  • trade regulation law (government regulation of unfair methods of competition, and unfair or deceptive business acts or practices, including an amalgam of related legal matters like antitrust, commodity imports and exports, franchise, distribution, consumer protection and advertising - available between [name of country, like Pakistan] and the United States)
  • international law (a body of legal rules governing the interaction between sovereign states (known as “public international law”), and the rights and duties of the citizens of sovereign states towards the citizens of other sovereign states (known as “private international law”) - available between [name of country, like Pakistan] and the United States)
  • business law (the laws that dictate how to form, buy, manage and close or sell any type of business, and then how to govern them while they are in existence - available in the United States)
  • commercial law (a broad group of laws that govern transactions between business entities (with the exception of the maritime transportation of goods), including all aspects of advertising and marketing, collections, bankruptcy, banking, contracts, negotiable instruments, collateral transactions, and both domestic and foreign trade - available in the United States)
  • corporate law (body of laws regulating the rights, relations and conduct of various types of business, including investors, directors, officers, employees, creditors and other stakeholders (such as consumers, the community and the environment), and how they interact with one another - available in the United States)
  • real estate law (group of laws governing the personal and business ownership and use of land and the buildings on that land - available in the United States)
  • construction law (an amalgam of other laws governing matters relating to building construction, engineering and related fields - available in the United States)
  • entertainment law (collection of contract and intellectual property laws governing the conduct of professionals and businesses unique to the entertainment industry, including the fields of theater, motion pictures, fine art, dance, opera, music, literary publishing, television and radio, all of which share a common mission of selling or otherwise profiting from the creative works or services provided by writers, songwriters, musicians and other artists - available in the United States)
  • fashion law (also known as “apparel law,” is a group of laws regulating the life of a garment and footwear, from conception to brand protection, and which also encompasses other legal issues facing the fashion, textile, apparel, luxury, footwear, jewelry and cosmetics industries - available in the United States)
  • franchise law (group of laws governing the relationship between one business entity (franchisor), which allows another business entity or person (franchisee) to operate under the franchiser's trade name, and to offer the franchiser's products or services, in exchange for a fee and with the franchisor's guidance - available in the United States)
  • mergers and acquisitions law (a host of financial activities in which business entities are bought and sold: an “acquisition” involves one party buying another by acquiring all of its assets, while a “merger” is the creation of a new entity from the assets of two businesses - available in the United States)
  • securities law (because securities are documents that show a person’s ownership in a business entity, securities laws are meant to protect investors by making sure they have accurate information about that business before they make an investment in it - available in the United States)
  • business restructuring and bankruptcy law (an evaluation of and a strategy for the turnaround of a financially-distressed business entity, including a valuation analysis of the business, its components and assets, and assessing the financial alternatives available for consideration, sometimes including a bankruptcy - available in the United States)
  • intellectual property law (a body of laws that govern a person or business entity’s rights in intangible property, such as patents, trademarks, copyrights, and trade secrets - available in the United States)
  • employment law (labor laws that mediate the relationship between workers, employing entities, trade unions and a government - available in the United States)
  • insurance law (a group of laws regulating contracts, under which one person (insurer) agrees to indemnify (financially protect against some loss, damage or liability) another person (insured) against a pre-defined category of risks in exchange for the payment of a premium - available in the United States)
  • estate and trust law (a branch of law involving the arrangement of a person's estate, for the distribution and management of that person's estate at death, through the use of wills, trusts, insurance and other legal techniques so as to reduce administration costs and transfer tax liability - available in the United States)
  • asset protection law (sometimes also referred to as “debtor-creditor” law, a set of legal techniques, and a body of statutory and common law, dealing with protecting assets of a person or business entity from civil money judgments by insulating assets from creditor claims without committing perjury or engaging in tax evasion - available worldwide)
  • food law (a group of laws prohibiting the adulteration or misbranding of any article of food involving five commercial sectors: consumers, retail and food service, food processing, production agriculture, and input suppliers for production agriculture (it includes food processing activities (from grower, then transported and distributed, to market), food safety tracking from importers, and food labeling approvals) - available between [name of country, like Pakistan] and the United States)