The Political Economy of International Trade Law
Essays in Honor of Robert E. Hudec
Herausgeber: Kennedy, Daniel L. M.; Southwick, James D.
The Political Economy of International Trade Law
Essays in Honor of Robert E. Hudec
Herausgeber: Kennedy, Daniel L. M.; Southwick, James D.
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Experts from law, economics and political science provide in-depth analysis of international trade issues.
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Experts from law, economics and political science provide in-depth analysis of international trade issues.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 712
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Februar 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1062g
- ISBN-13: 9780521065917
- ISBN-10: 0521065917
- Artikelnr.: 23580343
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 712
- Erscheinungstermin: 29. Februar 2008
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 38mm
- Gewicht: 1062g
- ISBN-13: 9780521065917
- ISBN-10: 0521065917
- Artikelnr.: 23580343
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Books on Demand GmbH
- In de Tarpen 42
- 22848 Norderstedt
- info@bod.de
- 040 53433511
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.
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.
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.
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.