Participant/carolina-rossini: Difference between revisions

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Carolina Rossini was the Coordinator of Legal Practice and International Partnerships at the Getulio Vargas Foundation Law School (FGV DIREITO RIO) and Lead of Projects in the Center for Technology & Society at the same University, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, during the past two years. She also, during this period, worked as a professor in the field of Intellectual Property and Internet Law, and as a consultant for Intellectual Property in Ford Foundation Brazil.  
Carolina Rossini is an attorney and holds degrees from the University of Sao Paulo-USP, Brazil (Bachelor in Law), Instituto de Empresa-IE, Madrid, Spain (MBA in E-Business), Sao Paulo State University-UNESP, Brazil (Master in International Negotiations), Certificate Course in Industrial Property from University of Buenos Aires and a Post-Graduation Course in Internet Governance from Diplo Foundation (E-Learning Certificate).  


Mrs. Rossini earned an MBA in E-Business from Instituto de Empresas de Madri, Spain, and a Master in International Negotiations from the joint Program from UNICAMP/UNESP/PUCSP, São Paulo, Brazil. Carolina is a lawyer graduated from Universidade de São Paulo (USP) and studied International Relations in PUCSP/Brazil.  
She is pursuing the Master in Law from Boston University, focused on Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy and working at the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School as a research assistant and at Diplo Foundation, as a Fellow with reserach focus on IP policy and the impact of the Internet.  


Currently, Carolina is a researcher at Diplo Foundation Internet Governance Program and is pursuing her Master in Law from Boston University, with focus in Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy.  
She is an active member of the A2K, UNESCO-OER, FLOSS and cyberlaw communities. She previously worked as Coordinator of Legal Clinical Programs at Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV) School of Law (2006-2007) and as Lead of Projects at FGV's Center for Technology and Society (2005-2007) where she worked in projects such as Creative Commons and Open Business, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  


Since 2000, Carolina is an active member of the A2K, cyber law and the FOSS community in Brazil, co-authoring studies such as the Regulation of Spam in Brazil a study commissioned by the Brazilian Internet Committee and accessible at http://www.cgi.br/publicacoes/documentacao/ct-spam-EstudoSpamCGIFGVversaofinal.pdf
Carolina has experience as a professor of Intellectual Property and Internet law and has served the Ford Foundation as a consultant. She also has more than five years' experience as an in-house attorney for Telefonica Telecommunications and Internet Group in Brazil (from 1999 to 2005).  


Before that, Carolina worked in Telefonica Telecom Group as a in-house lawyer.
Carolina has publications in her area and took part in international and national conferences as a speaker. Her last article (The Open Access Movement: opportunities and challenges for developing countries. Let them live in interesting times http://campus.diplomacy.edu/env/scripts/Pool/GetBin.asp?IDPool=3737 ) was chosen to two conferences: "The Politics of Intellectual Property," at the ECPR Joint Sessions in Rennes, France, April 2008 and First Pan-African Forum on Open Education Resources (OER) Ghana, Africa, on May.
 
Carolina is the co-author of a study commissioned by the Brazilian Internet Committee related to the Regulation of Spam in Brazil( http://www.cgi.br/publicacoes/documentacao/ct-spam-EstudoSpamCGIFGVversaofinal.pdf)


She can be reached at carolina.rossini@gmail.com
She can be reached at carolina.rossini@gmail.com


Main interests: IP policy, public interest and A2K; Net Neutrality; peer production
Main interests: IP policy, public interest and A2K; Net Neutrality; peer production; role of Universities in innovation process; open licensing.
 
Blog at http://innovationdeveloper.blogspot.com/

Revision as of 12:14, 2 February 2008

Carolina Rossini is an attorney and holds degrees from the University of Sao Paulo-USP, Brazil (Bachelor in Law), Instituto de Empresa-IE, Madrid, Spain (MBA in E-Business), Sao Paulo State University-UNESP, Brazil (Master in International Negotiations), Certificate Course in Industrial Property from University of Buenos Aires and a Post-Graduation Course in Internet Governance from Diplo Foundation (E-Learning Certificate).

She is pursuing the Master in Law from Boston University, focused on Intellectual Property and Innovation Policy and working at the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School as a research assistant and at Diplo Foundation, as a Fellow with reserach focus on IP policy and the impact of the Internet.

She is an active member of the A2K, UNESCO-OER, FLOSS and cyberlaw communities. She previously worked as Coordinator of Legal Clinical Programs at Getulio Vargas Foundation (FGV) School of Law (2006-2007) and as Lead of Projects at FGV's Center for Technology and Society (2005-2007) where she worked in projects such as Creative Commons and Open Business, in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Carolina has experience as a professor of Intellectual Property and Internet law and has served the Ford Foundation as a consultant. She also has more than five years' experience as an in-house attorney for Telefonica Telecommunications and Internet Group in Brazil (from 1999 to 2005).

Carolina has publications in her area and took part in international and national conferences as a speaker. Her last article (The Open Access Movement: opportunities and challenges for developing countries. Let them live in interesting times http://campus.diplomacy.edu/env/scripts/Pool/GetBin.asp?IDPool=3737 ) was chosen to two conferences: "The Politics of Intellectual Property," at the ECPR Joint Sessions in Rennes, France, April 2008 and First Pan-African Forum on Open Education Resources (OER) Ghana, Africa, on May.

Carolina is the co-author of a study commissioned by the Brazilian Internet Committee related to the Regulation of Spam in Brazil( http://www.cgi.br/publicacoes/documentacao/ct-spam-EstudoSpamCGIFGVversaofinal.pdf)

She can be reached at carolina.rossini@gmail.com

Main interests: IP policy, public interest and A2K; Net Neutrality; peer production; role of Universities in innovation process; open licensing.