The future of international economic integration : the embedded liberalism compromise revisited

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Détails bibliographiques
Auteur principal: Moon, Gillian (1954-....). (Directeur de la publication)
Autres auteurs: Toohey, Lisa. (Directeur de la publication)
Support: E-Book
Langue: Anglais
Publié: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press.
Sujets:
Autres localisations: Voir dans le Sudoc
Résumé: "As part of the 1947 General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), a compromise on domestic socio-economic issues was struck and subsequently given the name 'embedded liberalism'. The Future of International Economic Integration explores the multiple dimensions of the embedded liberalism compromise, to understand its contemporary influence on both the scope and application of international trade law, and on the content and character of parallel domestic socio-economic policy space. Top international economic law scholars have contributed chapters that look at the four principal dimensions of the topic. It sets out the history and character of the embedded liberalism compromise, explores the relationship between the compromise and WTO law, explores areas of contemporary tension that invoke the principles of the compromise such as human rights, cultural diversity, and environmental protection, and investigates what future impact the compromise might have on new trade and investment agreements"--
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Table des matières:
  • Cover; Half-title; Title page; Copyright information; Contents; List of Contributors; Foreword; Preface; List of Acronyms; Part I The Concept of the Embedded Liberalism Compromise; 1 Introduction to the Embedded Liberalism Compromise; 2 The Embedded Liberalism Compromise in the Making of the GATT and Uruguay Round Agreements; John Gerard Ruggie's Embedded Liberalism Compromise; The Embedded Liberalism Compromise in the GATT; Trade Liberalisation; Domestic Policy Space/Exceptions; The GATT Years
  • Embedded Liberalism or Something Else?; The Early GATT Years
  • Embedded Liberalism Flourishes
  • When Was the Beginning of the End?Non-Trade Objectives in the Tokyo and Uruguay Rounds: Embedded Liberalism or Not?; The Uruguay Round; The Current Context
  • The WTO Era; Is There Any Embedded Liberalism to Be Found?; What Does the Future Hold?; Conclusion; 3 The Embedded Liberalism Compromise As a Touchstone in Times of Political Turmoil; Shifting Notions of Liberalism, Embeddedness and Compromise; Liberalism; Embeddedness; Compromise; Structures and Actors; The Embedded Liberalism Compromise Today; 4 Universal Human Rights in the Embedded Liberalism Compromise
  • The Broad Elements of the CompromiseWere Human Rights Present in the Embedded Liberalism Compromise?; The Role of the International Labour Organization; Labor Rights and Obligations in the Compromise: Insights for the Modern Trade Regime; Labor-Related Rights and Obligations in International Law; The Contemporary Relationship; 5 Recalibrating the Embedded Liberalism Compromise: ''Legitimate Expectations'' and International Economic Law; Introduction; Expectations in Law; Expectations in WTO Law; Violation (GATT Article XXIII:1(a)); Non-Violation (GATT Article XXIII:1(b))
  • Expectations in International Investment LawExpectations and Embedded Liberalism; Conclusion; Part II The Dynamic of the Embedded Liberalism Compromise; 6 From Agriculture to Food Security: Embedded Liberalism and Stories of Regulatory Change; A Conventional Story; ITO to the GATT; The WTO; Beyond the WTO: Pressures for Regulatory Change; Embedded Liberalism: A Complex Story of Regulatory Change; ITO to the GATT; GATT to the WTO; The WTO and Pressure for Regulatory Change; Conclusion: Stories Yet to Be Told; 7 Embedded Liberalism and National Treatment: The Case of Taiwan's Mijiu Taxation
  • IntroductionThe Relevance of Regulatory Purpose under the GATT National Treatment Rule; Regulatory Purpose and Domestic Autonomy; National Treatment under GATT Article III:4 and the TBTA; The NT-Consistency of Taiwan's Mijiu Taxation: In Light of Embedded Liberalism; The Background; Consistency of the 2010 Amendment with National Treatment; Directly Competitive or Substitutable Products; Dissimilar Taxation; So As to Afford Protection; Conclusion; 8 Embedded Liberalism and International Investment Agreements: The Future of the Right to Regulate, with Reflections on WTO Law; Introduction