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HUB Talks, a podcast launched by K&L Gates, covers critical issues at the intersection of business and law. Tune in to HUB Talks for insight from K&L Gates lawyers that will help you stay on top of the latest industry and legal trends across a broad spectrum of industry sectors. You can listen to the podcasts via this page or you can subscribe to them via your favorite podcast app, using the icons below.

The following programs are part of HUB Talks:

Arbitration World: created as a supplement to K&L Gates’ long standing publication Arbitration World to provide access to Arbitration World content and other standalone arbitration related content.

Congressional Investigations 101: features discussions on topics related to U.S. congressional investigations.

The Digital Crisis PR: aims to help you proactively plan for and manage any digital crisis situation.

Distressed Solutions: Discussions of problem solving in Restructuring & Insolvency intended for debtors, creditors, private equity firms, R&I professionals, and accountants.

Fintech Forward: provides timely updates on emerging developments and cutting-edge advancements trending in the Fintech space.

Miami Legal Tropics: brings you hot-button topics and emerging legal trends that drive our Miami marketplace and extend far beyond.

OnRisk: discusses insurance topics from a policyholder's perspective.

Stopping Traffick: addresses topics that are important for corporations with complex supply chains by highlighting the specific risks of unknown human trafficking and forced labor in a company’s supply chain and how to best avoid this and its many adverse consequences.

Talking Sports Law: features discussions of sports law issues, interviews with sports law professionals, and analysis of recent trends at the intersection of sports and the law.

Sep 13, 2018

The U.S. International Trade Commission is charged with remedying unfair acts in the importation of products into the United States.  While alleged unfair acts at issue before the Commission tend to take the form of intellectual property infringement, the Commission’s mandate is broader, and can be construed to include unfair acts in the form of the importation of articles manufactured using child and forced labor in contravention of customary international law.  A complainant successfully proving such unfair acts is statutorily entitled to an order excluding such articles from further importation, engendering significant business and other benefits for such complainant.

Presenters: John Sullivan, III, Desiree Moore, George Summerfield