Alejandro Falla

Partner at Bullard Falla Ezcurra +

“I don’t need to go anywhere special to embark on an adventure. Working every day is already an adventure. The law firm is an adventure. I have been on an adventure for more than 20 years.”

Alejandro Falla

Partner at Bullard Falla Ezcurra +

“I don’t need to go anywhere special to embark on an adventure. Working every day is already an adventure. The law firm is an adventure. I have been on an adventure for more than 20 years.”

The adventure of working at BFE+

Alejandro joined the firm in 2001 and he has ever since devoted himself to this experience, with the motivation and passion of one who embarks on an adventure every day.. He is driven by the chance of giving back the trust that clients and friends place in BFE+ and, above all, of living his dream job: a combination of psychologist, economist, schoolteacher and, from time to time, lawyer. He earned an LL.M. degree in Regulation from the London School of Economics and Political Sciences, United Kingdom. A lawyer from Pontificia Universidad Católica del Perú (PUCP), he focuses his expertise on competition law, economic regulation, telecommunications, energy and transport regulation, contracts and arbitration. He is captivated by the parallel (or arguably parallel) literary universe in Vargas Llosa’s works and in historical novels, such as Daniel Wolf’s “The Salt of the Earth”, although he is always reading The Economist.

He is convinced that one lives in the present. Knowing what is coming next or changing what happened would kill He is convinced that one lives in the present. Knowing what is coming next or changing what happened would kill the fun of the game we call life. Alejandro leads the Master of Intellectual Property and Competition Law program and teaches the Competition Law course at PUCP. At present, he also teaches the Competition and Free Market Law course at Universidad del Pacífico and Universidad de Piura. For him, the path to growth and character building is to make decisions in times when uncertainty is rampant.