
20. 10. 2025
G&P Photo Contest 2025
This year, Giese & Partner held a photo contest for team members with the theme "Light and Shadow."
The best twelve photographs were chosen based on an internal vote and used for the G&P photo calendar for 2026.
1. Ondřej Rathouský, G&P Prague (photo no. 27) / 2. Marie Nálepová, G&P Prague (photo no. 1) / 3. Jan Valíček, G&P Prague (photo no. 4) / 4. Petra Blažková, G&P Prague (photo no. 2) / 5. Martina Novotná, G&P Prague (photo no. 7) / 6.-7. Jana Kirschová, G&P Prague(photo no. 25) and Michael Mack, G&P Prague (photo no. 13) / 8. Martin Holler, G&P Prague (photo no. 29) / 9. Fanni Elek, G&P Prague (photo no. 5) / 10. Jitka Sytařová, G&P Prague (photo no. 11) / 11. Andrea Machciniková, G&P Prague (photo no. 37) / 12. Markéta Mrázová, G&P Prague (photo no. 34)
Eighteen colleagues joined the contest and sent in more than 230 photos. Out of those, the following 53 photos moved on to the second round.
News & Publications
Jana Kostěncová als Referentin beim Bayerisch-Böhmischen Juristentag 2026
Unsere Kollegin Jana Kostěncová nimmt am Bayerisch-Böhmischen Juristentag 2026 in München als Referentin teil. In ihrem Vortrag „Der Erbfall kennt keine Grenzen – Einblicke in die tschechische Praxis“ beleuchtet sie praxisrelevante Fragen grenzüberschreitender Erbfälle.
The Legal 500 EMEA 2026: Giese & Partner Recognised as Leading Law Firm
According to The Legal 500 Europe, Middle East & Africa 2026 edition, which has just been released, Giese & Partner continues to be one of the leading law firms in the Czech Republic in the areas of real estate projects and of banking and finance law.
Conflicts of Interest: A Three-Layer Problem with Real Money at Stake
Babiš’s conflict-of-interest problem is not just politics – it is a three-layer legal framework, with the sharpest impact coming from the pub-lic-money firewall in Sections 4b and 4c. We explain why shifting Agrofert into trust-type structures still raises doubts, and why the Hartenberg arm remains a key part of the story. A brisk read on the limits of Czech legislation and why the European Commission’s next steps may keep this issue alive.




















































