Notice bibliographique
- Notice
Type(s) de contenu et mode(s) de consultation : Texte noté : sans médiation
Auteur(s) : Suttle, Oisin (1980-....)
Titre(s) : Distributive justice and world trade law [Texte imprimé] : a political theory of international trade regulation / Oisin Suttle
Publication : Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge university press, copyright 2018
Description matérielle : 1 vol. (XXXI-390 p.) ; 24 cm
Collection : Cambridge international trade and economic law
Lien à la collection : Cambridge international trade and economic law
Note(s) : Includes bibliographical references p. 336-376 and index
"What does justice demand in international trade regulation? And how far does World
Trade Organization (WTO) law respond to those demands? Whether our focus is developing
countries, struggling industries, or environmental protection, distributive conflict
is a pervasive feature of international economic law. Despite this, we lack an adequate
theory of distributive justice for this domain. Drawing on philosophical approaches
to global justice, this book advances a novel theory of justice in trade regulation,
and applies this to explain and critique the law of the WTO. Integrating theoretical
and doctrinal approaches, it demonstrates the potential for political theory to illuminate
and inform the progressive development of WTO law, including rules on border measures,
discrimination, trade remedies and domestic regulation. Written from an interdisciplinary
perspective, accessible to lawyers, philosophers and political scientists, the book
will appeal both to theorists interested in building bridges from theory to practice,
and practitioners seeking new perspectives on existing problems" ; "This book is an
attempt to answer some of the fundamental questions that these kinds of claims raise.
What exactly does it mean to say that international trade regulation is unfair, or
unjust? In a world of independent states, where is the line between those things a
state can permissibly do, even if this has effects on outsiders, and those that constitute
wrongs to those outsiders? How should states reconcile the claims of their own citizens,
including especially those least well off, with the demands of outsiders with whom
they do, or might, economically interact? And how far does the existing trade regime
correctly answer these questions? For too long, the liberal international economic
order assumed it was legitimized by an economic theory that showed international trade
was in everyone's interests"
Sujet(s) : Commerce international -- Réglementation -- Aspect politique
Justice distributive
Organisation mondiale du commerce
Indice(s) Dewey :
343.087 (23e éd.) = Commerce international (droit)
Identifiants, prix et caractéristiques : ISBN 9781108415811. - ISBN 1108415814 (rel.)
Identifiant de la notice : ark:/12148/cb45454709w
Notice n° :
FRBNF45454709
(notice reprise d'un réservoir extérieur)
Table des matières : Part I.. Foundations -- ; Why World Trade Law needs a theory of justice -- ; Part
II.. Justice -- ; Towards a political theory of international economic law -- ; Sovereignty,
nationality, and the limits of statism -- ; Self-determination and external trade
measures -- ; Part III.. Law -- ; Border measures, discrimination, and ETMs [external
trade measures] -- ; Justifying ETMs : development provisions and general exceptions
-- ; Trade remedies and fairness in international trade regulation -- ; Domestic regulation,
self-determination and DEMs [domestic economic measures] -- ; Part IV.. Progress --
; Conclusion: Where to from here?