Poverty and the International Economic Legal System (eBook, ePUB)
Duties to the World's Poor
Redaktion: Schefer, Krista Nadakavukaren
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Poverty and the International Economic Legal System (eBook, ePUB)
Duties to the World's Poor
Redaktion: Schefer, Krista Nadakavukaren
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With a focus on how trade, foreign investment, commercial arbitration and financial regulation rules affect impoverished individuals, Poverty and the International Economic Legal System examines the relationship between the legal rules of the international economic law system and states' obligations to reduce poverty. The contributors include leading practitioners, practice-oriented scholars and legal theorists, who discuss the human aspects of global economic activity without resorting to either overly dogmatic human rights approaches or technocratic economic views. The essays extend beyond…mehr
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- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. März 2013
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781107327047
- Artikelnr.: 52971082
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. März 2013
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781107327047
- Artikelnr.: 52971082
- Herstellerkennzeichnung Die Herstellerinformationen sind derzeit nicht verfügbar.
Poverty, obligations and the international economic legal system: what are
our duties to the global poor? Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer; 2.
Anti-poverty v. the international economic legal order? A legal cultural
critique Colin B. Picker; Part II. IEL Institutions and Poverty: Part IIA.
Trade: 3. Introductory note: trade and poverty Gabrielle Marceau; 4.
Poverty, redistribution and international trade regulation Thomas Cottier;
5. Trade liberalisation and poverty reduction: complementary or
contradictory aims? Bryan Mercurio; 6. God, the WTO and hunger Christian
Häberli; 7. Does free trade matter for poverty reduction? The case of ASEAN
Pasha Hsieh; 8. Poverty alleviation through paperless trade Emmanuel
Laryea; Part IIB. Investment and Arbitration: 9. Arbitration, insurance,
investment, corruption, and poverty: introduction J. J. Gass; 10. Foreign
direct investment and the alleviation of poverty: is investment arbitration
falling short of its goals? Mariel Dimsey; 11. The 'corruption objection'
to jurisdiction in investment arbitration: does it really protect the poor?
Stephan Wilske and Willa Obel; 12. Investment guarantees and international
obligations to reduce poverty: a human rights perspective Markus Krajewski;
13. International commercial arbitration and poverty: not obvious but
(maybe) possible Christopher Kee; 14. Access to justice in dispute
resolution: financial assistance in international arbitration Brooks W.
Daly and Sarah Melikian; 15. From problem to potential: the need to go
beyond investor-state disputes and integrate civil society, investors and
state at the local level Mariana Hernandez Crespo; 16. The Millennium
Challenge Corporation, law, and poverty reduction Stuart Kerr; Part IIC.
International Financial Regulation: 17. Reflections on law and poverty
Gavin Bingham; 18. Ambitious goals, limited tools? The IMF and poverty
reduction Ben Thirkell-White; 19. The direct contribution of the
international financial system to global poverty Ross P. Buckley; 20. The
World Bank: fighting poverty: ideology versus accountability Mark S. Ellis;
21. Life, debt and human rights: contextualising the international regime
for sovereign debt relief Celine Tan; 22. Sovereign debt, odious debt and
the poverty of nations Yvonne Wong; 23. Poverty and corruption Mark Pieth;
Part III. IEL and Poverty: Concerns of Particularly Vulnerable Populations:
24. International economic law, women and poverty Barnali Choudhury; 25.
The book famine: international copyright rules as barriers to knowledge for
impoverished persons with disabilities Caroline Hess-Klein; 26. Caring for
its children!: How the European Union uses free movement law to tackle
child poverty and social exclusion Aline Doussin; Part IV. Challenging Our
Assumptions: Is there a Duty to Reduce Poverty?: 27. Introduction Stephanie
B. Leinhardt and Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer; 28. Human rights obligations
of the poor Monica Hakimi; 29. The allocation of anti-poverty rights
duties: our rights, but whose duties? Samantha Besson; Part V. Conclusions:
30. Closing thoughts Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer.
Poverty, obligations and the international economic legal system: what are
our duties to the global poor? Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer; 2.
Anti-poverty v. the international economic legal order? A legal cultural
critique Colin B. Picker; Part II. IEL Institutions and Poverty: Part IIA.
Trade: 3. Introductory note: trade and poverty Gabrielle Marceau; 4.
Poverty, redistribution and international trade regulation Thomas Cottier;
5. Trade liberalisation and poverty reduction: complementary or
contradictory aims? Bryan Mercurio; 6. God, the WTO and hunger Christian
Häberli; 7. Does free trade matter for poverty reduction? The case of ASEAN
Pasha Hsieh; 8. Poverty alleviation through paperless trade Emmanuel
Laryea; Part IIB. Investment and Arbitration: 9. Arbitration, insurance,
investment, corruption, and poverty: introduction J. J. Gass; 10. Foreign
direct investment and the alleviation of poverty: is investment arbitration
falling short of its goals? Mariel Dimsey; 11. The 'corruption objection'
to jurisdiction in investment arbitration: does it really protect the poor?
Stephan Wilske and Willa Obel; 12. Investment guarantees and international
obligations to reduce poverty: a human rights perspective Markus Krajewski;
13. International commercial arbitration and poverty: not obvious but
(maybe) possible Christopher Kee; 14. Access to justice in dispute
resolution: financial assistance in international arbitration Brooks W.
Daly and Sarah Melikian; 15. From problem to potential: the need to go
beyond investor-state disputes and integrate civil society, investors and
state at the local level Mariana Hernandez Crespo; 16. The Millennium
Challenge Corporation, law, and poverty reduction Stuart Kerr; Part IIC.
International Financial Regulation: 17. Reflections on law and poverty
Gavin Bingham; 18. Ambitious goals, limited tools? The IMF and poverty
reduction Ben Thirkell-White; 19. The direct contribution of the
international financial system to global poverty Ross P. Buckley; 20. The
World Bank: fighting poverty: ideology versus accountability Mark S. Ellis;
21. Life, debt and human rights: contextualising the international regime
for sovereign debt relief Celine Tan; 22. Sovereign debt, odious debt and
the poverty of nations Yvonne Wong; 23. Poverty and corruption Mark Pieth;
Part III. IEL and Poverty: Concerns of Particularly Vulnerable Populations:
24. International economic law, women and poverty Barnali Choudhury; 25.
The book famine: international copyright rules as barriers to knowledge for
impoverished persons with disabilities Caroline Hess-Klein; 26. Caring for
its children!: How the European Union uses free movement law to tackle
child poverty and social exclusion Aline Doussin; Part IV. Challenging Our
Assumptions: Is there a Duty to Reduce Poverty?: 27. Introduction Stephanie
B. Leinhardt and Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer; 28. Human rights obligations
of the poor Monica Hakimi; 29. The allocation of anti-poverty rights
duties: our rights, but whose duties? Samantha Besson; Part V. Conclusions:
30. Closing thoughts Krista Nadakavukaren Schefer.