The Garrigues office in Bogotá is home to a team of over 60 lawyers highly specialized in the main practice areas required by the dynamic Colombian business environment. We have been providing cross-disciplinary advice and adapting to our client’s needs since committing to the development of the Colombian legal sector in 2013. Our network of own offices in Latin America and worldwide gives clients a unique advantage in the sector.
We provide legal services to businesses and public entities on matters ranging from day-to-day affairs to complex projects and high-profile deals in Colombia.
As an internationally recognized firm with a direct local presence, we advise multinationals and multilatinas, providing a uniform service with the same high quality standards across the board, notwithstanding of the jurisdiction(s) in play. This position also enables us to advise clients on cutting-edge issues, using knowledge garnered in different jurisdictions to their advantage.
Our services
M&A; Corporate; Banking and Finance; Projects; Energy and Infrastructure; Administrative and Constitutional Law; Labor and Employment; Tax; Litigation and Arbitration; Antitrust; Real Estate; Compliance; Consumers and Data Protection; Startups & Open Innovation; Private Equity; TMT; Foreign Trade; Immigration.
Publications
The law changed fixed-term employment agreements, ruled the disciplinary procedure, extends paid leave, changes deh apprenticeship agreement nature and reinforces the protection of women, people with disabilities and victims of violence. It also…
The protection of personal data has become especially relevant in the workplace, driven by digital transformation, the growing use of personnel monitoring and management technologies, as well as the need to respect privacy in increasingly diverse…
In this newsletter, we analyze the labor and employment market in Latin America and compile the most relevant legal updates in this area in Chile, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru.
This second edition presents, in an organized and didactic manner, the main characteristics of the antitrust regimes of Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Mexico, and Peru.