The Law, Economics and Politics of Retaliation in WTO Dispute Settlement

ISBN: 9781107655355 出版年:2010 页码:693 Chad P Bown Joost Pauwelyn Cambridge University Press

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Introduction: trade retaliation in WTO dispute settlement: a multi-disciplinary analysis Chad P. Bown and Joost Pauwelyn Part I. Background and Goal(s) of WTO Retaliation: 1. The nature of WTO arbitrations on retaliation Giorgio Sacerdoti 2. The calculation and design of trade retaliation in context: what is the goal of suspending WTO obligations? Joost Pauwelyn Comment John Jackson Comment Alan Sykes 3. Extrapolating purpose from practice: rebalancing or inducing compliance Gregory Shaffer and Daniel Ganin Part II. A Legal Assessment after Ten Arbitration Disputes: 4. The law of permissible WTO retaliation Thomas Sebastian Comment Nicolas Lockhart 5. From bananas to Byrd: damage calculation coming of age? Yves Renouf Part III. An Economic Assessment after Ten Arbitration Disputes: 6. The economics of permissible WTO retaliation Chad P. Bown and Michele Ruta Comment Alan Winters 7. Sticking to the rules: quantifying the market access protected by WTO retaliation Simon Evenett Part IV. The Domestic Politics and Procedures for Implementing Trade Retaliation: 8. The United States' experience and practice in suspending WTO obligations Scott Andersen and Justine Blanchet 9. The European Community's experience and practice in suspending WTO obligations Lothar Ehring 10. The politics of selecting trade retaliation in the EC: a view from the floor Hakan Nordstrom 11. Canada's experience and practice in suspending WTO obligations Vasken Khabayan 12. Is retaliation useful? Observations and analysis of Mexico's experience Jorge Huerta Goldman 13. Procedures for the design and implementation of trade retaliation in Brazil Luiz Salles 14. Retaliation in the WTO: the experience of Antigua and Barbuda in US - gambling Mark Mendel Part V. Problems and Options for Reform: 15. Evaluating the criticism that WTO retaliation rules undermine the utility of WTO dispute settlement for developing countries Hunter Nottage 16. Optimal sanctions in the WTO: the case for decoupling (and the uneasy case for the status quo) Alan Sykes Comment: money talks the talk (but does it walk the walk?) Petros Mavroidis 17. Sanctions in the WTO: problems and solutions William Davey 18. The case for multilateral regulation of the domestic decision-making process Reto Malacrida 19. The WTO secretariat and the role of economics in panels and arbitrations Chad P. Bown Comment: some reflections on the use of economic analysis in WTO dispute settlement proceedings Reto Malacrida 20. The equivalence standard under Article 22.4 DSU: a 'tariffic' misunderstanding? Simon Schropp Comment: a general equilibrium interpretation of some WTO dispute settlement cases - 4 EU-US trade conflicts Fritz Breuss Part VI. New Frontiers and Lessons from Other Fields: 21. Cross-retaliation and suspension under the GATS and TRIPS agreements Werner Zdouc 22. Cross-retaliation in TRIPS: issues of law and practice Frederick Abbott 23. Preliminary thoughts on WTO retaliation in the services sector Arthur Appleton 24. Compensation assessments: perspectives from investment arbitration Gabrielle Kaufmann-Kohler 25. Reforming WTO retaliation: any lessons from competition law? Simon Evenett.

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