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Settlement of Interstate Trade Disputes—The Role of Law and Legal Procedures*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 July 2009
Extract
The end of the 1980s and the beginning of the 1990s have witnessed a considerable shift in managing trade relations on an interstate level. The first and most striking event is obviously the GATT Uruguay Round. The prolonged negotiations, culminating in the ‘Brussels breakdown’ in December 1990, have shown a large degree of disagreement among the trading powers as to the extent and content of substantive international trade rights and obligations.
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References
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80. The Import Licensing Code and the three sectoral arrangements.
81. Art. 15 para. 7 of the Code (BISD, 26 Supplement, p. 185).
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91. Hudec, loc. cit. n. 7, p. 174.
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102. ICJ Rep. (1963) p. 29.
103. Ibid. p. 38.
104. Ibid. p. 30, quoting the case of Free Zones of Upper Savoy and the District of Gex. PCJJ, Series A/B, No. 46, p. 162.
105. PCIJ Series A/B, No. 46, p. 162.
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108. Before 1989 a practice of standard terms of reference developed (1979 Understanding, Annex, para. 6(ii)). The 1989 decision turned this practice into a rule.
109. 1989 Improvements, s. F (b) para. 1.
110. Jackson, op. cit. n. 94, p. 68; but Davey, loc. cit. n. 51, p. 89, points out that there is no general acceptance of the notion that a panel decision constitutes a binding precedent.
111. United States — Section 337 of the Tariff Act of 1930; BISD, 36 Supplement, p. 345, report issued on 16 January 1989.
112. United States — Imports of Certain Automotive Spring Assemblies; BISD, 30 Supplement, p. 107, report adopted on 26 May 1983.
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115. European Communities — Refunds on Exports of Sugar — Complaint by Brazil; BISD, 27 Supplement, p. 69, report adopted on 10 November 1980.
116. Ibid. p. 88.
117. European Communities —Refunds on Exports of Sugar; BISD, 26 Supplement, p. 290, at pp. 311-315, report adopted on 6 November 1979; see also Estabrook, J.S., ‘European Community Resistance to the Enforcement of GATT Panel Decisions on Sugar Export Subsidies’, 15 Cornell ILJ (1982) pp. 397–427, at 418–419.Google Scholar
118. ‘To examine and report upon the issues relating to EEC sugar export practices, referred to the Contracting Parties by Australia in Document L/4701.’ BISD, 26 Supplement, p. 291.
119. BISD, 27 Supplement, p. 69.
120. European Economic Community — Payments and Subsidies Paid to Processors and Producers of Oilseeds and Related Animal-Feed Proteins; report of the Panel issued on 14 December 1989 (GATT Doc. L/6627), para. 110.
121. Ibid. para. 111.
122. Ibid. para. 154.
123. See, e.g., terms of reference of panels on wheat flour and pasta, quoted by Coccia, loc. cit. n. 92, pp. 8-9, or the VAT panel, BISD, 31 Supplement, p. 247.
124. GATT Focus No. 80 (April 1991) p. 8.
125. 1989 Improvements, s. 1 para. 2.
126. 1989 Improvements, ss. B and E para. 2.
127. Petersmann, loc. cit. n. 72, pp. 338-339; Hilf, loc. cit. n. 76, p. 77.
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133. Hudec, op. cit. n. 47, pp. 37-47.
134. ICJ Rep. (1982) p. 18.
135. Canal-Forgues and Ostrihansky, toe. cit. n. 82, pp. 83-85.
136. The most important is Art. 407 para. 1, which states: ‘Subject to the further rights and obligations of this Agreement, the Parties affirm their respective rights and obligations under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) with respect to prohibitions or restrictions on bilateral trade in goods.’
137. Art. 1904 para. 2.
138. Annex, para. 4.
139. Canal-Forgues and Ostrihansky, loc. cit. n. 82, p. 68.
140. BISD, 11 Supplement, p. 99, report adopted on 16 November 1962.
141. E.g., United States Manufacturing Clause; BISD, 31 Supplement, p. 91, report adopted on 15/16 May 1984; Japan — Customs Duties, Taxes and Labelling Practices on Imported Wines and Alcoholic Beverages; BISD, 34 Supplement, p. 127, report adopted on 10 November 1987.
142. See, e.g., Delupis, L., ‘The Legal Value of Recommendations of International Organisations’, in Butler, W.E., ed., International Law and the International System (1987) pp. 47–65, at pp. 52, 54–55, and 56–57.Google Scholar
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144. Petersmann, E.-U., ‘The GATT Dispute Settlement System and the Uruguay Negotiations on its Reform’, in Šarčević, M. and Van Houtte, H., eds., Legal Issues in International Trade (1990) pp. 53–99, at pp. 65–66Google Scholar; see also Petersmann, loc. cit. n. 53, p. 64.
145. BISD, vol. n, p. 188, at p. 195 (para. 16), report adopted on 3 April 1950.
146. Oilseeds, supra, n 32, para. 148.
147. BISD, 14 Supplement, pp. 139-140; Dam, op. cit. n. 5 pp. 368-373; Hudec, op. cit. a 47, p. 242; see also the text accompanying a 45 supra.
148. Petersmann, loc. cit. n. 144, pp. 86-87.
149. During the EEC — Restrictions on Imports of Dessert Apples—Complaint by Chile dispute (BISD, 36 Supplement, p. 93, report adopted on 22 June 1989) the complainant asked for compensatory measures for the damage (para. 10). The panel, however, stated: ‘[I]t would be possible for the EEC and Chile to negotiate compensation consistent with the provisions of the General Agreement; however the Panel did not consider that it would be appropriate for it to make a recommendation on this matter’ (para. 12.36).
150. McGovern, E., International Trade Regulation. GATT, the United States and the European Community, 2nd edn. (1986) p. 43Google Scholar; Dam, op. cit. n. 5, p. 371.
151. See the text accompanying nn. 47-51 supra.
152. ‘“Sanctions” were imposed, but it quickly became clear that their purpose had been exhausted the moment after they had been authorized. Sanctions proved to be merely the final form in which the normative standard could be declared. When GATT law ran out of declarations, it ran out of things to do.’
Hudec, op. cit. n. 47, p. 202 (commenting on the US Dairy Quotas case).
153. PCIJ Series A, No. 17, p. 47; See also Riebel, E., ‘Damages’, in Bemhardt, R. ed., Encyclopedia of Public International Law, vol. 10 (1987) pp. 68–73Google Scholar and R. Wolfrum, ‘Reparation for Internationally Wrongful Act’, in Bernhardt, ibid. pp. 352-353.
154. White, loc. cit. n. 86, p. 165.
155. Horlick et al., loc. cit. n. 87, p. 67.
156. Jackson, J.H., ‘The Birth of the GATT-MTN System: A Constitutional Appraisal’, 12 Law and Policy in Int. Business (1980) pp. 21–58, at p. 44.Google Scholar
157. Standards Code, Art. 14.23; Customs Valuation Code, Art. 20 para. 11; Anti-Dumping Code, n. 14 (to Art. 15).
158. GATT Focus No. 80 (April 1991) pp. 1 and 8.
159. BISD, 35 Supplement, p. 98, report adopted on 22 March 1988.
160. McDorman, T.L., ‘International Trade Law Meets International Fisheries Law: The Canada-U.S. Salmon and Herring Dispute’, 7 J Int. Arbitration (1990) no. 4, pp. 107–121, at p. 118.Google Scholar
161. Meng, W., ‘The Hormone Conflict Between the EEC and the United States within the Context of GATT’, 11 Michigan JIL (1990) pp. 819–839.Google Scholar
162. Ibid. p. 825.
163. GATT Focus No. 59 (January 1989) p. 3.
164. GATT Focus No. 66 (November 1989) p. 3.
165. Van Houtte, H., ‘Health and Safety Regulations in International Trade’, in Šarčević, and Van, Houtte, eds., op. cit. a 144, pp. 128–144, at p. 134.Google Scholar
166. Art. 14 paras. 9 and 14.
167. Jackson, op. cit. n. 94, p. 95.
168. E.g., Elsen, T.J.H., Litispendence between the International Court of Justice and the Security Council (1986)Google Scholar; Klein, E., ‘Paralelles Tätigwerden von Sicherheitsrat und Internationalem Gerichtsbof bei friedensbedrohenden Streitigkeiten’, in Bemhardt, R. et al. , Völkerrecht als Rechtsordnung, Internationale Gerichsbarkeit, Menschenrechte (Festschrift für Hermann Mosler) (1983) pp. 467–491Google Scholar; Mc Whinney, op. cit. n. 12, pp. 143-147.
169. Polish Upper Silesia (Jurisdiction), PCIJ Series A, No. 6, p. 20.
170. Hudec, op. cit. n. 47, pp. 100-101.
171. GATT Focus No. 78 (January-February 1991) p. 4.
172. EEC Restrictions on Imports of Apples from Chile; BISD, 27 Supplement, p. 98, report adopted on 10 November 1980, and EEC — Restrictions on Imports of Dessert Apples — Complaint by Chile; BISD, 36 Supplement, p. 93, report adopted on 22 June 1989.
173. EEC — Programme of Minimum Import Prices, Licences and Surety Deposits for Certain Processed Fruits and Vegetables; BISD, 25 Supplement, p. 68, report adopted on 18 October 1978.
174. ICJ Rep. (1960) p. 214.
175. Hudec, op. cit. a 47; Mc Whinney, op. cit. n.12.
176. ICJ Rep. (1971) p. 3.
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