WTO Domestic Regulation and Services Trade
Herausgeber: De Meester, Bart; Lim, Aik Hoe
WTO Domestic Regulation and Services Trade
Herausgeber: De Meester, Bart; Lim, Aik Hoe
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Innovative, interdisciplinary, practitioner-oriented insights into the key challenges faced in addressing the services trade liberalization and domestic regulation interface.
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Innovative, interdisciplinary, practitioner-oriented insights into the key challenges faced in addressing the services trade liberalization and domestic regulation interface.
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Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 722g
- ISBN-13: 9781107062351
- ISBN-10: 1107062357
- Artikelnr.: 40578793
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 394
- Erscheinungstermin: 3. Dezember 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 26mm
- Gewicht: 722g
- ISBN-13: 9781107062351
- ISBN-10: 1107062357
- Artikelnr.: 40578793
1. An introduction to domestic regulation and GATS Aik Hoe Lim and Bart De
Meester; Part I. Impediments to Services Trade, Regulatory Theory and
Principles: 2. Why regulate? An overview of the rationale and purpose
behind regulation Tinne Heremans; 3. Domestic regulation: what are the
costs and benefits for international trade in services? Hildegunn Kyvik
Nordås; Part II. Legal Perspectives on WTO Principles and Domestic
Regulations: 4. Reasonableness, impartiality and objectivity Andrew
Mitchell and Tania Voon; 5. Balancing legal certainty with regulatory
flexibility Markus Krajewski; 6. Who's afraid of necessity? And why it
matters? Panagiotis Delimatsis; 7. Mutual recognition of services
regulation at the WTO Joel P. Trachtman; Part III. Case-studies: 8. Legal
services in the United States Erica Moeser and Laurel Terry; 9.
Telecommunications reform in China: fostering competition through state
intervention Henry Gao; 10. Information communication technology: the
Mauritian experience of regulation and reform Krishna Oolun; 11. Regulation
of postal services in a changing market environment: lessons from Australia
and elsewhere Siva Somasundram and Iain Sandford; 12. Mobile money services
provision in East Africa: the Ugandan experience Joan Apecu, Irene Kaggwa
Sewankambo and Yusuf Atiku Abdalla; 13. Financial services liberalization
and regulation in Japan: implications for future negotiation on market
access and domestic regulations Masamichi Kono, Koichi Iwai and Yoshitaka
Sakai; 14. Domestic regulations in Malaysia's higher education sector Tham
Siew Yean and Nik Ahmad Kamal Nik Mahmod; 15. Domestic regulations and
India's trade in health services: a study of hospital and telemedicine
services Rupa Chanda and Pralok Gupta; 16. Operating integrated logistics
services in a fragmented regulatory environment: what is the cost? Ruosi
Zhang; 17. Domestic regulation of retail food distribution services in
Israel: the missing link between food prices and social protest Tomer
Broude and Lior Herman; 18. Regulatory impact analysis Darrell Porter and
Lauren Wight; Part IV. Concluding Remarks: 19. Services liberalization,
negotiations and regulation: some lessons from the GATS experience Hamid
Mamdouh; 20. Addressing the domestic regulation and services trade
interface: reflections on the way ahead Aik Hoe Lim and Bart De Meester.
Meester; Part I. Impediments to Services Trade, Regulatory Theory and
Principles: 2. Why regulate? An overview of the rationale and purpose
behind regulation Tinne Heremans; 3. Domestic regulation: what are the
costs and benefits for international trade in services? Hildegunn Kyvik
Nordås; Part II. Legal Perspectives on WTO Principles and Domestic
Regulations: 4. Reasonableness, impartiality and objectivity Andrew
Mitchell and Tania Voon; 5. Balancing legal certainty with regulatory
flexibility Markus Krajewski; 6. Who's afraid of necessity? And why it
matters? Panagiotis Delimatsis; 7. Mutual recognition of services
regulation at the WTO Joel P. Trachtman; Part III. Case-studies: 8. Legal
services in the United States Erica Moeser and Laurel Terry; 9.
Telecommunications reform in China: fostering competition through state
intervention Henry Gao; 10. Information communication technology: the
Mauritian experience of regulation and reform Krishna Oolun; 11. Regulation
of postal services in a changing market environment: lessons from Australia
and elsewhere Siva Somasundram and Iain Sandford; 12. Mobile money services
provision in East Africa: the Ugandan experience Joan Apecu, Irene Kaggwa
Sewankambo and Yusuf Atiku Abdalla; 13. Financial services liberalization
and regulation in Japan: implications for future negotiation on market
access and domestic regulations Masamichi Kono, Koichi Iwai and Yoshitaka
Sakai; 14. Domestic regulations in Malaysia's higher education sector Tham
Siew Yean and Nik Ahmad Kamal Nik Mahmod; 15. Domestic regulations and
India's trade in health services: a study of hospital and telemedicine
services Rupa Chanda and Pralok Gupta; 16. Operating integrated logistics
services in a fragmented regulatory environment: what is the cost? Ruosi
Zhang; 17. Domestic regulation of retail food distribution services in
Israel: the missing link between food prices and social protest Tomer
Broude and Lior Herman; 18. Regulatory impact analysis Darrell Porter and
Lauren Wight; Part IV. Concluding Remarks: 19. Services liberalization,
negotiations and regulation: some lessons from the GATS experience Hamid
Mamdouh; 20. Addressing the domestic regulation and services trade
interface: reflections on the way ahead Aik Hoe Lim and Bart De Meester.
1. An introduction to domestic regulation and GATS Aik Hoe Lim and Bart De
Meester; Part I. Impediments to Services Trade, Regulatory Theory and
Principles: 2. Why regulate? An overview of the rationale and purpose
behind regulation Tinne Heremans; 3. Domestic regulation: what are the
costs and benefits for international trade in services? Hildegunn Kyvik
Nordås; Part II. Legal Perspectives on WTO Principles and Domestic
Regulations: 4. Reasonableness, impartiality and objectivity Andrew
Mitchell and Tania Voon; 5. Balancing legal certainty with regulatory
flexibility Markus Krajewski; 6. Who's afraid of necessity? And why it
matters? Panagiotis Delimatsis; 7. Mutual recognition of services
regulation at the WTO Joel P. Trachtman; Part III. Case-studies: 8. Legal
services in the United States Erica Moeser and Laurel Terry; 9.
Telecommunications reform in China: fostering competition through state
intervention Henry Gao; 10. Information communication technology: the
Mauritian experience of regulation and reform Krishna Oolun; 11. Regulation
of postal services in a changing market environment: lessons from Australia
and elsewhere Siva Somasundram and Iain Sandford; 12. Mobile money services
provision in East Africa: the Ugandan experience Joan Apecu, Irene Kaggwa
Sewankambo and Yusuf Atiku Abdalla; 13. Financial services liberalization
and regulation in Japan: implications for future negotiation on market
access and domestic regulations Masamichi Kono, Koichi Iwai and Yoshitaka
Sakai; 14. Domestic regulations in Malaysia's higher education sector Tham
Siew Yean and Nik Ahmad Kamal Nik Mahmod; 15. Domestic regulations and
India's trade in health services: a study of hospital and telemedicine
services Rupa Chanda and Pralok Gupta; 16. Operating integrated logistics
services in a fragmented regulatory environment: what is the cost? Ruosi
Zhang; 17. Domestic regulation of retail food distribution services in
Israel: the missing link between food prices and social protest Tomer
Broude and Lior Herman; 18. Regulatory impact analysis Darrell Porter and
Lauren Wight; Part IV. Concluding Remarks: 19. Services liberalization,
negotiations and regulation: some lessons from the GATS experience Hamid
Mamdouh; 20. Addressing the domestic regulation and services trade
interface: reflections on the way ahead Aik Hoe Lim and Bart De Meester.
Meester; Part I. Impediments to Services Trade, Regulatory Theory and
Principles: 2. Why regulate? An overview of the rationale and purpose
behind regulation Tinne Heremans; 3. Domestic regulation: what are the
costs and benefits for international trade in services? Hildegunn Kyvik
Nordås; Part II. Legal Perspectives on WTO Principles and Domestic
Regulations: 4. Reasonableness, impartiality and objectivity Andrew
Mitchell and Tania Voon; 5. Balancing legal certainty with regulatory
flexibility Markus Krajewski; 6. Who's afraid of necessity? And why it
matters? Panagiotis Delimatsis; 7. Mutual recognition of services
regulation at the WTO Joel P. Trachtman; Part III. Case-studies: 8. Legal
services in the United States Erica Moeser and Laurel Terry; 9.
Telecommunications reform in China: fostering competition through state
intervention Henry Gao; 10. Information communication technology: the
Mauritian experience of regulation and reform Krishna Oolun; 11. Regulation
of postal services in a changing market environment: lessons from Australia
and elsewhere Siva Somasundram and Iain Sandford; 12. Mobile money services
provision in East Africa: the Ugandan experience Joan Apecu, Irene Kaggwa
Sewankambo and Yusuf Atiku Abdalla; 13. Financial services liberalization
and regulation in Japan: implications for future negotiation on market
access and domestic regulations Masamichi Kono, Koichi Iwai and Yoshitaka
Sakai; 14. Domestic regulations in Malaysia's higher education sector Tham
Siew Yean and Nik Ahmad Kamal Nik Mahmod; 15. Domestic regulations and
India's trade in health services: a study of hospital and telemedicine
services Rupa Chanda and Pralok Gupta; 16. Operating integrated logistics
services in a fragmented regulatory environment: what is the cost? Ruosi
Zhang; 17. Domestic regulation of retail food distribution services in
Israel: the missing link between food prices and social protest Tomer
Broude and Lior Herman; 18. Regulatory impact analysis Darrell Porter and
Lauren Wight; Part IV. Concluding Remarks: 19. Services liberalization,
negotiations and regulation: some lessons from the GATS experience Hamid
Mamdouh; 20. Addressing the domestic regulation and services trade
interface: reflections on the way ahead Aik Hoe Lim and Bart De Meester.