Title: The political economy of international trade law : essays in honor of Robert E. Hudec
Abstract: Introduction Part I. The Constitutional Developments of International Trade Law: 1. Sovereignty, subsidiary and separation of powers: the high wire balancing act of globalization John H. Jackson 2. Constitutionalism and WTO law: from a state-centered approach towards a human rights approach in international economic law Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann 3. WTO decision-making: is it reformable? Friedl Weiss 4. Some institutional issues presently before the WTO Pieter J. Kuijper 5. Domestic regulation and international trade: where's the race? Ronald A. Cass and John R. Haring Part II. The Scope of International Trade Law: Adding New Subjects and Restructuring Old Ones: 6. What subjects are suitable for WTO agreement? Brian Hindley Comment Joel P. Trachtman 7. International action on bribery and corruption: why the dog didn't bark in the WTO Kenneth W. Abbott and Duncan Snidal Comment: It's elementary, my dear friends Fred Morrison 8. Alternative national merger standards and the prospects for international cooperation Daniel J. Gifford and Robert T. Kudrle Comment: Harmonizing global merger standards E. Thomas Sullivan 9. Agriculture on the way to firm international trading rules Stefan Tangermann Part III. Legal Relations between Developed and Developing Countries: 10. The Uruguay Round North-South Grand Bargain: implications for future negotiations Sylvia Ostry Comment: The Uruguay Round North-South Bargain: will the WTO get over it? Michael Finger 11. The TRIPS-legality of measures taken to address public health crises: responding to USTR-State-Industry positions that undermine the WTO Frederick M. Abbott Comment: The TRIPS agreement T. N. Srinivasan 12. 'If only we were elephants': the political economy of the WTO's treatment of trade and environment matters Gregory C. Shaffer Comment Sara Dillon 13. The Seattle impasse and its implications for the WTO John S. Odell Comment Robert Howse 14. Developing country interests in WTO agricultural policy G. Edward Schuh Comment: developing country interests in WTO agricultural policy Terry L. Roe Part IV. The Operation of the WTO Dispute Settlement Procedure: 15. Testing international trade law: empirical studies of GATT/WTO dispute settlement Marc L. Busch and Eric Reinhardt 16. The appellate body and its contribution to WTO dispute settlement Debra P. Steger 17. A permanent panel body for WTO dispute settlement: desirable or practical? William J. Davey Comment: step by step to an international trade court Amelia Porges 18. International trade policy and domestic food safety regulation: the case for substantial deference by the WTO dispute settlement body under the SPS agreement Michel Trebilcock and Julie Soloway Comment: the case against clarity Daniel A. Farber 19. Judicial supremacy. Judicial restraint and the issue of consistency of preferential trade agreements with the WTO: the apple in the picture Petros C. Mavroidis 20. Rethinking WTO trade sanctions Steve Charnovitz 21. Problems with the compliance structure of the WTO dispute resolution process Gary N. Horlick 22. 'Inducing compliance' in WTO Dispute Settlement David Palmeter and Stanimir A. Alexandrov.
Publication Year: 2002
Publication Date: 2002-01-01
Language: en
Type: book
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Cited By Count: 113
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