This book comprises fifteen specially commissioned contributions from the Editorial Board of the Oxford Journal of International Economic Law in celebration of the Journal's tenth anniversary. The contributions examine various issues confronting the international economic regime today, and cover a wide range of international economic institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO. It pays particular attention to examining the WTO and its regulatory scope, its systemic and structural deficiencies, its role in development and in liberalising trade in services, its tense relationship…mehr
This book comprises fifteen specially commissioned contributions from the Editorial Board of the Oxford Journal of International Economic Law in celebration of the Journal's tenth anniversary. The contributions examine various issues confronting the international economic regime today, and cover a wide range of international economic institutions such as the IMF, the World Bank, and the WTO. It pays particular attention to examining the WTO and its regulatory scope, its systemic and structural deficiencies, its role in development and in liberalising trade in services, its tense relationship to regionalism and to trade-related issues such as environment, competition and dispute settlement in the field of investment. The contributions are authored by leading academics in the field, including lawyers, economists, and political scientists who come from a range of developed and developing country backgrounds. This book constitutes a reflection by important individuals on almost all the major contemporary issues facing the WTO today, and therefore represents a snapshot of the key lines of thinking among many of the leading legal scholars of the WTO and international economic regime which are likely to guide the field in the years to come. This is a book edition of the special 10th anniversary third issue of vol. 10 of the Oxford Journal of International Economic Law September 2007
John Jackson is the University Professor at the Georgetown University's Law College. He is the editor in chief and a founding editor of the Journal of International Economic Law, and the series editor for the International Economic Law series. William J. Davey is the Guy Raymond Jones Chair at the College of Law, University of Illinois. He is an associate editor of The Journal of International Economic Law.
Inhaltsangabe
* 1: William J. Davey: The Future of International Economic Law * 2: Hector R. Torres: Reforming the International Monetary Fund: Why its Legitimacy is at Stake * 3: Frank J. Garcia: Global Justice and the Bretton Woods Institutions * 4: Debra P. Steger: The Culture of the WTO: Why it Needs to Change * 5: Thomas Cottier: Preparing for Structural Reform in the WTO * 6: Daniel C. Esty: Good Governance at the World Trade Organization: Building a Foundation of Administrative Law * 7: Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann: Multilevel Judicial Governance of International Trade Requires a Common Conception of Rule of Law and Justice * 8: Seung Wha Chang: WTO for Trade and Development Post-Doha * 9: Frederick M. Abbott: A New Dominant Trade Species Emerges: Is Bilateralism a Threat? * 10: Matthew Schaefer: Ensuring that Regional Trade Agreements Complement the WTO System: US Unilateralism a Supplement to WTO Initiatives? * 11: Gary Hufbauer and Sherry Stephenson: Services Trade: Past Liberalization and Future Challenges * 12: Joel P. Trachtman: Regulatory Jurisdiction and the WTO * 13: Andrew Green and Michael Trebilcock: Enforcing WTO Obligations: What can we Learn from Export Subsidies? * 14: Steven Charnovitz: The WTO's Environmental Progress * 15: David J. Gerber: Competition Law and the WTO: Rethinking the Relationship * 16: Won-Mog Choi: The Present and Future of the Investor-State Dispute Settlement Paradigm
* 1: William J. Davey: The Future of International Economic Law * 2: Hector R. Torres: Reforming the International Monetary Fund: Why its Legitimacy is at Stake * 3: Frank J. Garcia: Global Justice and the Bretton Woods Institutions * 4: Debra P. Steger: The Culture of the WTO: Why it Needs to Change * 5: Thomas Cottier: Preparing for Structural Reform in the WTO * 6: Daniel C. Esty: Good Governance at the World Trade Organization: Building a Foundation of Administrative Law * 7: Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann: Multilevel Judicial Governance of International Trade Requires a Common Conception of Rule of Law and Justice * 8: Seung Wha Chang: WTO for Trade and Development Post-Doha * 9: Frederick M. Abbott: A New Dominant Trade Species Emerges: Is Bilateralism a Threat? * 10: Matthew Schaefer: Ensuring that Regional Trade Agreements Complement the WTO System: US Unilateralism a Supplement to WTO Initiatives? * 11: Gary Hufbauer and Sherry Stephenson: Services Trade: Past Liberalization and Future Challenges * 12: Joel P. Trachtman: Regulatory Jurisdiction and the WTO * 13: Andrew Green and Michael Trebilcock: Enforcing WTO Obligations: What can we Learn from Export Subsidies? * 14: Steven Charnovitz: The WTO's Environmental Progress * 15: David J. Gerber: Competition Law and the WTO: Rethinking the Relationship * 16: Won-Mog Choi: The Present and Future of the Investor-State Dispute Settlement Paradigm
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