Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Foreword by E. THOMAS SULLIVAN
- Introduction: An overview of the volume
- Part I The constitutional developments of international trade law
- Part II The scope of international trade law: Adding new subjects and restructuring old ones
- Part III Legal relations between developed and developing countries
- Part IV The operation of the WTO dispute settlement procedure
- 15 Testing international trade law: Empirical studies of GATT/WTO dispute settlement
- 16 The Appellate Body and its contribution to WTO dispute settlement
- 17 A permanent panel body for WTO dispute settlement: Desirable or practical?
- Comment: Step by step to an international trade court
- 18 International trade policy and domestic food safety regulation: The case for substantial deference by the WTO Dispute Settlement Body under the SPS Agreement
- Comment: The case against clarity
- 19 Judicial supremacy, judicial restraint, and the issue of consistency of preferential trade agreements with the WTO: The apple in the picture
- 20 Should the teeth be pulled? An analysis of WTO sanctions
- 21 Problems with the compliance structure of the WTO dispute resolution process
- 22 “Inducing compliance” in WTO dispute settlement
- Bibliography of works by ROBERT E. HUDEC
- Index
- References
15 - Testing international trade law: Empirical studies of GATT/WTO dispute settlement
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Preface
- Foreword by E. THOMAS SULLIVAN
- Introduction: An overview of the volume
- Part I The constitutional developments of international trade law
- Part II The scope of international trade law: Adding new subjects and restructuring old ones
- Part III Legal relations between developed and developing countries
- Part IV The operation of the WTO dispute settlement procedure
- 15 Testing international trade law: Empirical studies of GATT/WTO dispute settlement
- 16 The Appellate Body and its contribution to WTO dispute settlement
- 17 A permanent panel body for WTO dispute settlement: Desirable or practical?
- Comment: Step by step to an international trade court
- 18 International trade policy and domestic food safety regulation: The case for substantial deference by the WTO Dispute Settlement Body under the SPS Agreement
- Comment: The case against clarity
- 19 Judicial supremacy, judicial restraint, and the issue of consistency of preferential trade agreements with the WTO: The apple in the picture
- 20 Should the teeth be pulled? An analysis of WTO sanctions
- 21 Problems with the compliance structure of the WTO dispute resolution process
- 22 “Inducing compliance” in WTO dispute settlement
- Bibliography of works by ROBERT E. HUDEC
- Index
- References
Summary
Law did play an important role in this lawyerless multilateral trade order, but which one?
Roessler (1999, 10)Introduction
Dispute settlement under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) and its successor, the World Trade Organization (WTO), is the very “backbone of the multilateral trading system” (Moore 2000). Indeed, despite being likened to a “court with no bailiff” (Rossmiller 1994, 263), the GATT/WTO system is widely touted as the most successful of any comparable institution today (Hudec 1993, 353; Petersmann 1997, 63–65; Moore 2000). Add to this that the WTO's Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU) has corrected many of the shortcomings of GATT 1947, and it is little wonder that most observers are even more optimistic about the future. Until recently, however, there has been virtually no empirical evidence brought to bear on the most important questions in the field. Why do countries take some of their complaints to GATT/WTO and prosecute others unilaterally, “out of court”? Why are some disputes settled with liberalization by the defendant, while the status quo prevails in others? And has greater legalization of the system made dispute settlement more efficacious? Taking Robert Hudec's Enforcing International Trade Law as its point of departure, a growing literature has begun to tackle these and related questions, testing hypotheses against data on the hundreds of complaints filed since 1948. Some of the results confirm prevailing views about the political economy of GATT/WTO dispute settlement.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Political Economy of International Trade LawEssays in Honor of Robert E. Hudec, pp. 457 - 481Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2002
References
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