Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Economics and international law
- 1 The economics of the most favored nation clause
- 2 The economics of “injury” in antidumping and countervailing duty cases
- 3 The economics of “injury” in antidumping and countervailing duty cases: A reply to Professor Sykes
- 4 Innovations in support of the unitary injury test in U.S. unfair trade cases
- 5 The free trade–fair trade debate: Trade, labor, and the environment
- 6 International conflict and coordination in environmental policies
- 7 Market modernization of law: Economic development through decentralized law
- 8 Toward a positive theory of privatization: Lessons from Soviet-type economies
- 9 New stories on exchange rate policies in transition
- 10 Is deposit insurance inevitable? – lessons from Argentina
- 11 The market for migrants
- 12 The interplay of liquidation and reorganization in the bankruptcy systems of Canada and the United States: The role of screens, gatekeepers, and guillotines
- 13 International political economy approaches to international institutions
- 14 The trade effects of domestic antitrust enforcement
- 15 The Hartford Insurance Company case: Antitrust in the global economy – welfare effects and sovereignty
- 16 Recognition of foreign judgments as a trade law issue: The economics of private international law
- 17 Externalities and extraterritoriality: The law and economics of prescriptive jurisdiction
- Index
16 - Recognition of foreign judgments as a trade law issue: The economics of private international law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Introduction: Economics and international law
- 1 The economics of the most favored nation clause
- 2 The economics of “injury” in antidumping and countervailing duty cases
- 3 The economics of “injury” in antidumping and countervailing duty cases: A reply to Professor Sykes
- 4 Innovations in support of the unitary injury test in U.S. unfair trade cases
- 5 The free trade–fair trade debate: Trade, labor, and the environment
- 6 International conflict and coordination in environmental policies
- 7 Market modernization of law: Economic development through decentralized law
- 8 Toward a positive theory of privatization: Lessons from Soviet-type economies
- 9 New stories on exchange rate policies in transition
- 10 Is deposit insurance inevitable? – lessons from Argentina
- 11 The market for migrants
- 12 The interplay of liquidation and reorganization in the bankruptcy systems of Canada and the United States: The role of screens, gatekeepers, and guillotines
- 13 International political economy approaches to international institutions
- 14 The trade effects of domestic antitrust enforcement
- 15 The Hartford Insurance Company case: Antitrust in the global economy – welfare effects and sovereignty
- 16 Recognition of foreign judgments as a trade law issue: The economics of private international law
- 17 Externalities and extraterritoriality: The law and economics of prescriptive jurisdiction
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The constitutional framework in each of the United States and the European Union recognizes the importance of the free movement of judgments to a successful economic union. The full faith and credit clause of the U.S. Constitution creates one of the largest markets in the world for the free movement of judgments. In the European Community (EC), the original six member states first agreed in Article 220 of the Treaty of Rome to negotiate toward “the simplification of formalities governing the reciprocal recognition and enforcement of judgments of courts or tribunals and of arbitration awards.” The negotiations under Article 220 led to the Brussels Convention on jurisdiction and the recognition and enforcement of judgments. Consistent with its free-trade agreements with EFTA states and the extended common market under the European Economic Area, this process has been extended to the EFTA states through the similar Lugano Convention.
These measures demonstrate both national and regional acknowledgment that for the free movement of goods, services, capital, and persons to be effective, they must be accompanied by the free movement of judgments. In order for an economic union to function efficiently, a legal judgment – like any other property interest – must not have its value impaired merely by crossing a geographic border within the union, and both the property interest represented by the judgment, and the legal mechanism for enforcing rights in that property interest, must be respected throughout the union.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Economic Dimensions in International LawComparative and Empirical Perspectives, pp. 592 - 641Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998