moira.truijens@klos.nl
+31 6 22 12 00 66
Moïra Truijens received her education at Utrecht University and has been working as an intellectual property lawyer since 2005.
Moïra's practice encompasses matters involving copyright law, design law, trademark law, patent law, advertising law and unfair competition law. Moïra litigates and advises on the protection of design, technology, trade names, trademarks and content. In addition to her work as an attorney, Moïra is a deputy judge at the Court of Appeal in Den Bosch and a domain name panelist at the World Intellectual Property Organisation in .nl country code domain name disputes.
Moïra is active in a large number of national and international associations in her field such as the Dutch Association for Intellectual Property Law, the Benelux Association for Trademark and Design Law, the Copyright Association, the Association des Praticiens du Droit des Marques et des Modèles as well as Marques. Moïra is active as a lecturer, publicist and speaker in her field. Among others, she co-authored the Dutch AIPPI group reports on ‘Requirements for the protection of designs’ and ‘Bad faith trademarks’ and is secretary of the Marques designs team.
Moïra has been praised in the trade press for many years as an exceptionally skilled, pragmatic and effective lawyer. The authoritative Chambers describes Moïra as ‘extremely effective and capable of quickly understanding complex matters’ and IAM Patent describes her as a lawyer 'who always explores all options in her pursuit of achieving a client's goal and is not afraid to suggest alternatives to litigation'. The equally authoritative Legal500 describes her, among other things, as an ‘exceptional IP lawyer’, ‘a deal maker not a deal breaker’ and ‘a licensing and transactions maestro.’ In addition, she was repeatedly selcted by IPStars as one of Top250 Women in IP.
Moïra has registered the main area of intellectual property law in the Dutch Bar Association's Register of Jurisdictions. Pursuant to this registration, she is obliged to obtain ten training points each calendar year according to the standards of the Dutch Bar Association this main area of law.