This second volume of the Handbook of International Trade focuses on the economic analysis of international laws and institutions as they impact trade. The text addresses central issues in international trade including labor; environmental rights; preferential trade agreements; antitrust policy; pat
Handbook of International Trade: Economic and Legal Analyses of Trade Policy and Institutions, Volume II
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 589
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
This second volume of the Handbook of International Trade focuses on the economic and legal analysis of international laws and institutions as they impact trade.
Containing chapters written by both economic and legal scholars, this volume encourages cross-discipline discussion with writing that is accessible to those approaching the material from any background.
Central issues to those studying international trade are addressed, including:
- labor, environmental rights, and preferential trade agreements
- antitrust policy
- patent rights
- trade liberalization
- foreign direct investment.
Chapter 1 What is Free Trade?: The Rorschach Test at the Heart of the Trade and Environment Debate (pages 5โ41): David M. Driesen
Chapter 2 Rules of Power in an Age of Law: Process Opportunism and TRIPS Dispute Settlement (pages 42โ72): Ruth L. Okediji
Chapter 3 Teaching Old Laws New Tricks: The Legal Obligation of Non?Attribution and the Need for Economic Rigor in Injury Analyses Under US Trade Law (pages 73โ106): James P. Durling and Matthew P. McCullough
Chapter 4 Trade?Related Labor and Environment Rights Agreements? (pages 107โ133): Chantal Thomas
Chapter 5 A Comparative Analysis of Compliance Institutions in International Trade Law and International Environmental Law (pages 134โ184): Brett Frischmann
Chapter 6 The National Treatment Principle in International Trade Law (pages 185โ238): Michael J. Trebilcock and Shiva K. Giri
Chapter 7 Do Not Ask Too Many Questions: The Institutional Arrangements for Accommodating Regional Integration Within the WTO (pages 239โ278): Petros Constantinos Mavroidis
Chapter 8 Trade and Informal Institutions (pages 279โ293): James E. Anderson
Chapter 9 The Economics of Preferential Trade Agreements (pages 294โ312): Pravin Krishna
Chapter 10 Conditionality, Separation, and Open Rules in Multilateral Institutions (pages 313โ332): Paola Conconi and Carlo Perroni
Chapter 11 Antitrust Policy in Open Economies: Price Fixing and International Cartels (pages 333โ357): Eric W. Bond
Chapter 12 Modern Commercial Policy: Managed Trade or Retaliation? (pages 358โ382): Thomas J. Prusa and Susan Skeath
Chapter 13 Antidumping versus Antitrust: Trade and Competition Policy (pages 383โ402): Ian Wooton and Maurizio Zanardi
Chapter 14 Trade and the Globalization of Patent Rights (pages 403โ426): Rod Falvey, Feli Martinez and Geoff Reed
Chapter 15 Mixed Markets with Counterfeit Producers (pages 427โ458): E. Kwan Choi
Chapter 16 Endogenous Injury (pages 459โ471): James C. Hartigan
Chapter 17 International Trade in Services: More Than Meets the Eye (pages 472โ498): Lawrence J. White
Chapter 18 The Dynamic Effects of Trade Liberalization and Environmental Policy Harmonization (pages 499โ525): Larry Karp and Jinhua Zhao
Chapter 19 Do Bilateral Tax Treaties Promote Foreign Direct Investment? (pages 526โ546): Bruce A. Blonigen and Ronald B. Davies
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Climate change remains a global challenge requiring international collaborative action. Another area where countries have successfully committed to a long-term multilateral resolution is the liberalization of international trade. Integration into the world economy has proven a powerful means for cou
<p><span>This book examines the need for greater legal coherence within international trade negotiations between the European Union (EU) and external trade relations. An introspective analysis of EU trade law and policy is presented that highlights the complex issue of EU unity. A particular focus i
This Handbook adopts a traditional definition of the subject, and focuses primarily on the explanation of international transactions in goods, services, and assets, and on the main domestic effects of those transactions. The first volume deals with the ''real side'' of international economics. It is