Wto Law and Developing Countries
Herausgeber: Bermann, George A.; Mavroidis, Petros C.
Wto Law and Developing Countries
Herausgeber: Bermann, George A.; Mavroidis, Petros C.
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This 2007 book examines the way the WTO treats different developing countries and how that treatment varies from state to state.
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This 2007 book examines the way the WTO treats different developing countries and how that treatment varies from state to state.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 382
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Juni 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 579g
- ISBN-13: 9781107403093
- ISBN-10: 110740309X
- Artikelnr.: 33624882
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 382
- Erscheinungstermin: 10. Juni 2011
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 21mm
- Gewicht: 579g
- ISBN-13: 9781107403093
- ISBN-10: 110740309X
- Artikelnr.: 33624882
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Introduction Petros Mavroidis and George Bermann; 1. The legal status of
special and differential treatment provisions under WTO agreements Edwini
Kessie; 2. Trade preferences to small developing countries Nuno Limao and
Marcela Olarreaga; 3. China in the WTO 2006: 'Law and its limitations in
the context of TRIPS' Frederick M. Abbott; 4. Developing countries in the
WTO service negotiations: doing enough? Juan A. Marchetti; Comment on
Marchetti Kal Raustiala; 5. Developing countries and the protection of
intellectual property rights: current issues in the WTO Jayashree Watal; 6.
Participation of developing countries in the WTO - new evidence based on
the 2003 official records Hakan Nordstrom; Comment on Nordstrom Jeffrey
Dunoff; 7. Developing countries and GATT/WTO dispute settlement Marc Busch
and Eric Reinhardt; 8. Representing developing countries in WTO dispute
settlement proceedings Niall Meagher; Comment on Meagher Chad P. Bown; 9.
Compensation and retaliation: a developing country's perspective Mateo
Diego-Fernandez; 10. A preference for development: the law and economics of
GSP Gene Grossman and Alan Sykes; Comments on Grossman and Sykes: Joel
Trachtman, Jeffrey Dunoff and Jeffrey Kenner; 11. The GSP fallacy: a
critique of the appellate body's ruling in the GSP case on legal, economic,
and political/systemic grounds Anastasios Tomazos; 12. Is the WTO doing
enough for developing countries? Patrick Low; Comment on Low Wilfred J.
Ethier.
special and differential treatment provisions under WTO agreements Edwini
Kessie; 2. Trade preferences to small developing countries Nuno Limao and
Marcela Olarreaga; 3. China in the WTO 2006: 'Law and its limitations in
the context of TRIPS' Frederick M. Abbott; 4. Developing countries in the
WTO service negotiations: doing enough? Juan A. Marchetti; Comment on
Marchetti Kal Raustiala; 5. Developing countries and the protection of
intellectual property rights: current issues in the WTO Jayashree Watal; 6.
Participation of developing countries in the WTO - new evidence based on
the 2003 official records Hakan Nordstrom; Comment on Nordstrom Jeffrey
Dunoff; 7. Developing countries and GATT/WTO dispute settlement Marc Busch
and Eric Reinhardt; 8. Representing developing countries in WTO dispute
settlement proceedings Niall Meagher; Comment on Meagher Chad P. Bown; 9.
Compensation and retaliation: a developing country's perspective Mateo
Diego-Fernandez; 10. A preference for development: the law and economics of
GSP Gene Grossman and Alan Sykes; Comments on Grossman and Sykes: Joel
Trachtman, Jeffrey Dunoff and Jeffrey Kenner; 11. The GSP fallacy: a
critique of the appellate body's ruling in the GSP case on legal, economic,
and political/systemic grounds Anastasios Tomazos; 12. Is the WTO doing
enough for developing countries? Patrick Low; Comment on Low Wilfred J.
Ethier.
Introduction Petros Mavroidis and George Bermann; 1. The legal status of
special and differential treatment provisions under WTO agreements Edwini
Kessie; 2. Trade preferences to small developing countries Nuno Limao and
Marcela Olarreaga; 3. China in the WTO 2006: 'Law and its limitations in
the context of TRIPS' Frederick M. Abbott; 4. Developing countries in the
WTO service negotiations: doing enough? Juan A. Marchetti; Comment on
Marchetti Kal Raustiala; 5. Developing countries and the protection of
intellectual property rights: current issues in the WTO Jayashree Watal; 6.
Participation of developing countries in the WTO - new evidence based on
the 2003 official records Hakan Nordstrom; Comment on Nordstrom Jeffrey
Dunoff; 7. Developing countries and GATT/WTO dispute settlement Marc Busch
and Eric Reinhardt; 8. Representing developing countries in WTO dispute
settlement proceedings Niall Meagher; Comment on Meagher Chad P. Bown; 9.
Compensation and retaliation: a developing country's perspective Mateo
Diego-Fernandez; 10. A preference for development: the law and economics of
GSP Gene Grossman and Alan Sykes; Comments on Grossman and Sykes: Joel
Trachtman, Jeffrey Dunoff and Jeffrey Kenner; 11. The GSP fallacy: a
critique of the appellate body's ruling in the GSP case on legal, economic,
and political/systemic grounds Anastasios Tomazos; 12. Is the WTO doing
enough for developing countries? Patrick Low; Comment on Low Wilfred J.
Ethier.
special and differential treatment provisions under WTO agreements Edwini
Kessie; 2. Trade preferences to small developing countries Nuno Limao and
Marcela Olarreaga; 3. China in the WTO 2006: 'Law and its limitations in
the context of TRIPS' Frederick M. Abbott; 4. Developing countries in the
WTO service negotiations: doing enough? Juan A. Marchetti; Comment on
Marchetti Kal Raustiala; 5. Developing countries and the protection of
intellectual property rights: current issues in the WTO Jayashree Watal; 6.
Participation of developing countries in the WTO - new evidence based on
the 2003 official records Hakan Nordstrom; Comment on Nordstrom Jeffrey
Dunoff; 7. Developing countries and GATT/WTO dispute settlement Marc Busch
and Eric Reinhardt; 8. Representing developing countries in WTO dispute
settlement proceedings Niall Meagher; Comment on Meagher Chad P. Bown; 9.
Compensation and retaliation: a developing country's perspective Mateo
Diego-Fernandez; 10. A preference for development: the law and economics of
GSP Gene Grossman and Alan Sykes; Comments on Grossman and Sykes: Joel
Trachtman, Jeffrey Dunoff and Jeffrey Kenner; 11. The GSP fallacy: a
critique of the appellate body's ruling in the GSP case on legal, economic,
and political/systemic grounds Anastasios Tomazos; 12. Is the WTO doing
enough for developing countries? Patrick Low; Comment on Low Wilfred J.
Ethier.







