AIPLA President’s blog: FICPI, ACPC and ABA meetings

Managing IP is part of Legal Benchmarking Limited, 1-2 Paris Gardens, London, SE1 8ND

Copyright © Legal Benchmarking Limited and its affiliated companies 2026

Accessibility | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Modern Slavery Statement

AIPLA President’s blog: FICPI, ACPC and ABA meetings

AIPLA President Jeff Lewis reflects on the holiday season and outlines his busy travel schedule over the next month

aiplalogospelled.jpg

lewisjeff200.jpg

pbwt-stack-2line-280.jpg

The holiday season allowed me a travel respite, although my work with AIPLA remained as busy as ever. During the break, we submitted comments on everything from Chinese Patent Law to ICANN proceedings, and worked on finalizing several Amicus briefs. The break from travel also gave me time to consider the schedule of the AIPLA President.

As I’ve mentioned, one of AIPLA’s strategic initiatives is to increase its global presence. It sure feels like my travel schedule has achieved that goal, at least in some respects. But there is still a lot of ground to cover (for the moment I have cancelled my monthly Metro North ticket), and so I thought I would let you know about upcoming trips both foreign and domestic.

At the end of next week I will be leaving for the Executive Committee meeting of the International Federation of Industrial Property Attorneys, known as FICPI (an acronym for Fédération Internationale des Conseils en Propriété Industrielle) to be held in Cartagena, Colombia. I’m interested in understanding the various views on intellectual property that will be coming from many different areas of the world and seeing how they all intersect. I have already been looking at the working groups that will present on everything from the packaging of tobacco products (particularly proposals to remove trademarks from the packaging) to the refund of search and examination fees.

Straight from Cartagena I will be going to Florida to spend time at the winter meeting of the Association of Corporate Patent Counsel (ACPC) in Orlando. A number of in-house AIPLA members will be there and I look forward to hearing about needs and interests from the corporate side. After that, it is off to Tampa where AIPLA will be having its Mid-Winter Institute.

The Mid-Winter Institute this year should be fascinating; its focus is on the role of intellectual property in business. I have often told people that as a litigator I try to remember that the bottom line is the client’s bottom line. The Mid-Winter Institute will really look at this in a broader perspective and keep in mind the broader business interests for all areas of intellectual property. Wayne Sobon, President-Elect of AIPLA, is the officer in charge of this meeting and he is putting in a huge amount of time planning it down to the smallest detail. I am looking forward to a great conference.

After Tampa, I will be home for just a few days and then it’s off to the ABA meeting in Dallas. The Intellectual Property Law Section of ABA and AIPLA consider ourselves sister organizations, and the head of each attends the other’s meetings as an invited guest. It’s always interesting to see how other bar associations operate and the issues that they grapple with, since usually they are the same things that AIPLA is debating.

I will let you know how these trips go, but until then thanks for reading.

Jeff

more from across site and SHARED ros bottom lb

More from across our site

News of a trademark row over Taylor Swift’s ‘The Life of a Showgirl’ and Nokia’s expansion of its IoT licensing programme were also among the top talking points
IP attorneys share how the Cox v Sony ruling impacts their counselling strategies, and if the case could influence how courts may assess liability for AI platforms
Natasha Daughtrey shares how firms can help their women litigators take the lead on trials, and why she is seeing a convergence of tech and life sciences disputes
The LMG Life Sciences Awards is thrilled to present the shortlist for the 2024 EMEA Awards
Having agreed to a cost cap in the landmark Emotional Perception AI case, the government should do the right thing and pay at least the bare minimum
Ruth Hoy will join the firm's IP practice alongside Huw Cookson, who will also become a partner
IP boutique firm says its platform will help navigate ‘scattered’ decisions by bringing case law, commentary and research under one umbrella
The latest round of promotions has contributed to a 21% rise in partner headcount in the past two years, with business leaders eyeing litigation and the UPC
João Negrão, EUIPO executive director, is joined by a seasoned official to reflect on three decades of stories
Sim & San, which secured the $16m victory for their client, previously led Communications Components Antenna to a $26m damages win in 2024
Gift this article