A History of Law and Lawyers in the GATT/WTO
Herausgeber: Marceau, Gabrielle
A History of Law and Lawyers in the GATT/WTO
Herausgeber: Marceau, Gabrielle
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How did a treaty that emerged in the aftermath of the Second World War, and barely survived its early years, evolve into one of the most influential organisations in international law?
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How did a treaty that emerged in the aftermath of the Second World War, and barely survived its early years, evolve into one of the most influential organisations in international law?
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 704
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 1002g
- ISBN-13: 9781107448445
- ISBN-10: 1107448441
- Artikelnr.: 51389846
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 704
- Erscheinungstermin: 12. Februar 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 37mm
- Gewicht: 1002g
- ISBN-13: 9781107448445
- ISBN-10: 1107448441
- Artikelnr.: 51389846
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
The General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) was created in 1947 and operated almost five decades on a provisional basis until 1995 when the WTO was established. Its goal is to improve the welfare of peoples of its member countries, specifically by lowering trade barriers and providing a platform for the negotiation of trade. The organization deals with the rules of trade between nations at a global or near global level; it is responsible for negotiating and implementing new trade agreements and charged with policing Member Countries' adherence to all WTO agreements. In 2007 there were 150 Member States.
1. Introduction and overview; 2. Moving towards an international rule of
law? The role of the GATT and the WTO in its development; Part I. The Role
of Law and Lawyers in the GATT System: 1948-92: Infancy: Reflections on the
Origins of Legalization in the GATT: 3. We were young together: at the
GATT, 1956-8; 4. Law and lawyers in the multilateral trading system: back
to the future; 5. Towards a GATT legal office; 6. A short history of the
rules division; Childhood: the Tokyo Round and the establishment and work
of the first legal office: 7. Remembrance of things past: my time at the
GATT; 8. The first years of the GATT legal service; 9. Early dispute
settlement in the GATT; 10. GATT dispute settlement practices: setting the
stage for reform; 11. The role of law in international trade relations and
the establishment of the Legal Affairs Division of the GATT; 12. From the
GATT to the WTO: a personal journey; 13. The establishment of a GATT Office
of Legal Affairs and the limits of 'public reason' in the GATT/WTO dispute
settlement system; 14. Evolving dispute settlement practice with respect to
anti-dumping in the late 1980s and early 1990s; Part II. Legal Work after
the Entry into Force of the WTO: 1993-5: Adolescence: Transition from the
GATT to the WTO: 15. The Legal Affairs Division and law in the Uruguay
Round and the GATT; 16. Taking care of business: the Legal Affairs Division
from the GATT to the WTO; 17. From the GATT to the WTO: the expanding
duties of the Legal Affairs Division in non-panel matters; 18. The WTO
Dispute Settlement Body: procedural aspects of its operation; Young adult:
the WTO as a formal international organisation: 19. Making law in 'new' WTO
subject areas: competition policy and government procurement; 20. The meat
in the sandwich; 21. From theory to practice: drafting and applying the
Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU); 22. WTO panel composition:
searching far and wide for administrators of world trade justice; 23. Legal
counsel to the administration: a legal adviser who should not look like
one; 24. Outside looking in, after many years on the inside looking out;
Part III. The Changing Legal Character of the Multilateral Trading System:
1996 to Today: Adulthood: The Quasi-Judicialization of the Panel Process by
the Rules and Legal Affairs Divisions: 25. The first years of WTO dispute
settlement: dealing with controversy and building confidence; 26. From
Seattle to Doha: from the surreal to the unreal. A personal account; 27.
Extending the scope and strengthening the legitimacy of WTO dispute
settlement and some personal recollections Bruce Wilson; 28. Working in WTO
dispute settlement: pride without prejudice; 29. The meaning of everything:
the origin and evolution of the GATT and the WTO analytical index; 30. When
science meets law: the rule of law in the development of the panel's expert
consultation process; Gaining maturity: the appellate body and the impact
of the appellate review on the development of international trade law: 31.
The founding of the appellate body; 32. The authority of an institution:
the appellate body under review; 33. Launching the appellate body; 34.
Revisiting the appellate body: the first six years; 35. Not in clinical
isolation; 36. The appellate body in its formative years: a personal
perspective; 37. Reflections on the functioning of the appellate body; 38.
A country boy goes to Geneva; 39. Contribution of the WTO appellate body to
treaty interpretation; Part IV. Looking Ahead: New Challenges and
Opportunities: 40. Advising the Director-General: brevity is the soul of
wit, even for a lawyer; 41. The Legal Affairs Division at thirty and
beyond; 42. Will the increased workload of WTO panels and the appellate
body change how WTO disputes are adjudicated?; 43. Concluding remarks.
law? The role of the GATT and the WTO in its development; Part I. The Role
of Law and Lawyers in the GATT System: 1948-92: Infancy: Reflections on the
Origins of Legalization in the GATT: 3. We were young together: at the
GATT, 1956-8; 4. Law and lawyers in the multilateral trading system: back
to the future; 5. Towards a GATT legal office; 6. A short history of the
rules division; Childhood: the Tokyo Round and the establishment and work
of the first legal office: 7. Remembrance of things past: my time at the
GATT; 8. The first years of the GATT legal service; 9. Early dispute
settlement in the GATT; 10. GATT dispute settlement practices: setting the
stage for reform; 11. The role of law in international trade relations and
the establishment of the Legal Affairs Division of the GATT; 12. From the
GATT to the WTO: a personal journey; 13. The establishment of a GATT Office
of Legal Affairs and the limits of 'public reason' in the GATT/WTO dispute
settlement system; 14. Evolving dispute settlement practice with respect to
anti-dumping in the late 1980s and early 1990s; Part II. Legal Work after
the Entry into Force of the WTO: 1993-5: Adolescence: Transition from the
GATT to the WTO: 15. The Legal Affairs Division and law in the Uruguay
Round and the GATT; 16. Taking care of business: the Legal Affairs Division
from the GATT to the WTO; 17. From the GATT to the WTO: the expanding
duties of the Legal Affairs Division in non-panel matters; 18. The WTO
Dispute Settlement Body: procedural aspects of its operation; Young adult:
the WTO as a formal international organisation: 19. Making law in 'new' WTO
subject areas: competition policy and government procurement; 20. The meat
in the sandwich; 21. From theory to practice: drafting and applying the
Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU); 22. WTO panel composition:
searching far and wide for administrators of world trade justice; 23. Legal
counsel to the administration: a legal adviser who should not look like
one; 24. Outside looking in, after many years on the inside looking out;
Part III. The Changing Legal Character of the Multilateral Trading System:
1996 to Today: Adulthood: The Quasi-Judicialization of the Panel Process by
the Rules and Legal Affairs Divisions: 25. The first years of WTO dispute
settlement: dealing with controversy and building confidence; 26. From
Seattle to Doha: from the surreal to the unreal. A personal account; 27.
Extending the scope and strengthening the legitimacy of WTO dispute
settlement and some personal recollections Bruce Wilson; 28. Working in WTO
dispute settlement: pride without prejudice; 29. The meaning of everything:
the origin and evolution of the GATT and the WTO analytical index; 30. When
science meets law: the rule of law in the development of the panel's expert
consultation process; Gaining maturity: the appellate body and the impact
of the appellate review on the development of international trade law: 31.
The founding of the appellate body; 32. The authority of an institution:
the appellate body under review; 33. Launching the appellate body; 34.
Revisiting the appellate body: the first six years; 35. Not in clinical
isolation; 36. The appellate body in its formative years: a personal
perspective; 37. Reflections on the functioning of the appellate body; 38.
A country boy goes to Geneva; 39. Contribution of the WTO appellate body to
treaty interpretation; Part IV. Looking Ahead: New Challenges and
Opportunities: 40. Advising the Director-General: brevity is the soul of
wit, even for a lawyer; 41. The Legal Affairs Division at thirty and
beyond; 42. Will the increased workload of WTO panels and the appellate
body change how WTO disputes are adjudicated?; 43. Concluding remarks.
1. Introduction and overview; 2. Moving towards an international rule of
law? The role of the GATT and the WTO in its development; Part I. The Role
of Law and Lawyers in the GATT System: 1948-92: Infancy: Reflections on the
Origins of Legalization in the GATT: 3. We were young together: at the
GATT, 1956-8; 4. Law and lawyers in the multilateral trading system: back
to the future; 5. Towards a GATT legal office; 6. A short history of the
rules division; Childhood: the Tokyo Round and the establishment and work
of the first legal office: 7. Remembrance of things past: my time at the
GATT; 8. The first years of the GATT legal service; 9. Early dispute
settlement in the GATT; 10. GATT dispute settlement practices: setting the
stage for reform; 11. The role of law in international trade relations and
the establishment of the Legal Affairs Division of the GATT; 12. From the
GATT to the WTO: a personal journey; 13. The establishment of a GATT Office
of Legal Affairs and the limits of 'public reason' in the GATT/WTO dispute
settlement system; 14. Evolving dispute settlement practice with respect to
anti-dumping in the late 1980s and early 1990s; Part II. Legal Work after
the Entry into Force of the WTO: 1993-5: Adolescence: Transition from the
GATT to the WTO: 15. The Legal Affairs Division and law in the Uruguay
Round and the GATT; 16. Taking care of business: the Legal Affairs Division
from the GATT to the WTO; 17. From the GATT to the WTO: the expanding
duties of the Legal Affairs Division in non-panel matters; 18. The WTO
Dispute Settlement Body: procedural aspects of its operation; Young adult:
the WTO as a formal international organisation: 19. Making law in 'new' WTO
subject areas: competition policy and government procurement; 20. The meat
in the sandwich; 21. From theory to practice: drafting and applying the
Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU); 22. WTO panel composition:
searching far and wide for administrators of world trade justice; 23. Legal
counsel to the administration: a legal adviser who should not look like
one; 24. Outside looking in, after many years on the inside looking out;
Part III. The Changing Legal Character of the Multilateral Trading System:
1996 to Today: Adulthood: The Quasi-Judicialization of the Panel Process by
the Rules and Legal Affairs Divisions: 25. The first years of WTO dispute
settlement: dealing with controversy and building confidence; 26. From
Seattle to Doha: from the surreal to the unreal. A personal account; 27.
Extending the scope and strengthening the legitimacy of WTO dispute
settlement and some personal recollections Bruce Wilson; 28. Working in WTO
dispute settlement: pride without prejudice; 29. The meaning of everything:
the origin and evolution of the GATT and the WTO analytical index; 30. When
science meets law: the rule of law in the development of the panel's expert
consultation process; Gaining maturity: the appellate body and the impact
of the appellate review on the development of international trade law: 31.
The founding of the appellate body; 32. The authority of an institution:
the appellate body under review; 33. Launching the appellate body; 34.
Revisiting the appellate body: the first six years; 35. Not in clinical
isolation; 36. The appellate body in its formative years: a personal
perspective; 37. Reflections on the functioning of the appellate body; 38.
A country boy goes to Geneva; 39. Contribution of the WTO appellate body to
treaty interpretation; Part IV. Looking Ahead: New Challenges and
Opportunities: 40. Advising the Director-General: brevity is the soul of
wit, even for a lawyer; 41. The Legal Affairs Division at thirty and
beyond; 42. Will the increased workload of WTO panels and the appellate
body change how WTO disputes are adjudicated?; 43. Concluding remarks.
law? The role of the GATT and the WTO in its development; Part I. The Role
of Law and Lawyers in the GATT System: 1948-92: Infancy: Reflections on the
Origins of Legalization in the GATT: 3. We were young together: at the
GATT, 1956-8; 4. Law and lawyers in the multilateral trading system: back
to the future; 5. Towards a GATT legal office; 6. A short history of the
rules division; Childhood: the Tokyo Round and the establishment and work
of the first legal office: 7. Remembrance of things past: my time at the
GATT; 8. The first years of the GATT legal service; 9. Early dispute
settlement in the GATT; 10. GATT dispute settlement practices: setting the
stage for reform; 11. The role of law in international trade relations and
the establishment of the Legal Affairs Division of the GATT; 12. From the
GATT to the WTO: a personal journey; 13. The establishment of a GATT Office
of Legal Affairs and the limits of 'public reason' in the GATT/WTO dispute
settlement system; 14. Evolving dispute settlement practice with respect to
anti-dumping in the late 1980s and early 1990s; Part II. Legal Work after
the Entry into Force of the WTO: 1993-5: Adolescence: Transition from the
GATT to the WTO: 15. The Legal Affairs Division and law in the Uruguay
Round and the GATT; 16. Taking care of business: the Legal Affairs Division
from the GATT to the WTO; 17. From the GATT to the WTO: the expanding
duties of the Legal Affairs Division in non-panel matters; 18. The WTO
Dispute Settlement Body: procedural aspects of its operation; Young adult:
the WTO as a formal international organisation: 19. Making law in 'new' WTO
subject areas: competition policy and government procurement; 20. The meat
in the sandwich; 21. From theory to practice: drafting and applying the
Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU); 22. WTO panel composition:
searching far and wide for administrators of world trade justice; 23. Legal
counsel to the administration: a legal adviser who should not look like
one; 24. Outside looking in, after many years on the inside looking out;
Part III. The Changing Legal Character of the Multilateral Trading System:
1996 to Today: Adulthood: The Quasi-Judicialization of the Panel Process by
the Rules and Legal Affairs Divisions: 25. The first years of WTO dispute
settlement: dealing with controversy and building confidence; 26. From
Seattle to Doha: from the surreal to the unreal. A personal account; 27.
Extending the scope and strengthening the legitimacy of WTO dispute
settlement and some personal recollections Bruce Wilson; 28. Working in WTO
dispute settlement: pride without prejudice; 29. The meaning of everything:
the origin and evolution of the GATT and the WTO analytical index; 30. When
science meets law: the rule of law in the development of the panel's expert
consultation process; Gaining maturity: the appellate body and the impact
of the appellate review on the development of international trade law: 31.
The founding of the appellate body; 32. The authority of an institution:
the appellate body under review; 33. Launching the appellate body; 34.
Revisiting the appellate body: the first six years; 35. Not in clinical
isolation; 36. The appellate body in its formative years: a personal
perspective; 37. Reflections on the functioning of the appellate body; 38.
A country boy goes to Geneva; 39. Contribution of the WTO appellate body to
treaty interpretation; Part IV. Looking Ahead: New Challenges and
Opportunities: 40. Advising the Director-General: brevity is the soul of
wit, even for a lawyer; 41. The Legal Affairs Division at thirty and
beyond; 42. Will the increased workload of WTO panels and the appellate
body change how WTO disputes are adjudicated?; 43. Concluding remarks.