WTO Retaliation: Effectiveness and Purposes

WTO Retaliation: Effectiveness and Purposes

by Michelle Limenta
WTO Retaliation: Effectiveness and Purposes

WTO Retaliation: Effectiveness and Purposes

by Michelle Limenta

eBook

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Overview

The central point of this book concerns three main issues: the problems of WTO retaliation, the question of the effectiveness of retaliation, and the purposes of retaliation. WTO retaliation is often deemed ineffective due to its inherited shortcomings. This book highlights the significance in identifying the purposes of retaliation prior to evaluating its effectiveness. Put differently, it refers to the purpose-based approach of effectiveness. It is a common understanding that the purpose of WTO retaliation is to induce compliance. This book, nevertheless, argues in favour of coexistence of the multiple purposes of retaliation, including reaching a mutually agreeable solution. These views are based on the extensive research conducted on the purposes of WTO retaliation, namely through interpreting Article 22 of the DSU; examining the remedies rules within the frameworks of public international law, and law and economics; and assessing the academic writings/debates as well as the statements of arbitrators. Finally, by evaluating a number of disputes involving WTO retaliation, this book demonstrates the reasonableness and soundness of WTO retaliation in light of its multiple purposes.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781509900022
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
Publication date: 02/23/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 160
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Michelle Limenta is a Senior Lecture and Director of the Center for International Trade and Investment at Universitas Pelita Harapan, Indonesia.
Michelle Limenta is a Senior Lecture and Director of the Center for International Trade and Investment at Universitas Pelita Harapan, Indonesia. Currently, she is also a consultant to the World Bank. Michelle completed her undergraduate legal studies in Indonesia at Trisakti University and an LLM at the University of Leiden in the Netherlands. She was awarded a doctoral scholarship to pursue her PhD on WTO dispute settlement at Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand. Following her PhD completion, she won a postdoctoral fellowship in the New Zealand Centre for International Economic Law (NZCIEL), where she continues to be an affiliated researcher. She was awarded a fellowship at the Centre of International Law, National University of Singapore (CIL-NUS) in 2015. She was also a member of panellist in the 2015 ELSA Regional Round Moot Court Competition on WTO Law. She has advised and provided research to government and private agencies on numerous issues related to Indonesia's trade policy, free trade agreements, and WTO law and policy. She is admitted to practice law in Indonesia.

Table of Contents

1. Overview
I. Introduction to WTO Dispute Settlement: The Best Vote of Confidence for the Multilateral Trading System
II. Problems Presented: Retaliation, a Flaw in the Successful System?
III. WTO Law in Relation to Other Legal Systems
IV. The Objective and Plan of the Book
2. Retaliation in the Multilateral Trading System
I. Temporary Remedies in the DSU
II. Law to Retaliate Under GATT and WTO Dispute Settlement
III. Retaliation in Regional Trade Agreements
3. Shortcomings of WTO Retaliation and Reform Proposals
I. The Shortcomings and Problems Inherent in WTO Retaliation
II. Proposals to Enhance WTO Retaliation and the Criticisms
4. Purposed-based Approach in Evaluating Effectiveness
I. Compliance, Implementation, Effectiveness and Purpose-based Approach
II. Debates Regarding the Purpose of Retaliation
5. Legal Quests in Searching for the Purposes of Retaliation
I. First Quest: Reference to Remedies Under the ILC Draft Articles on State Responsibility
II. Second Quest: Reference to Contract Remedies from Law and Economics Perspective
III. Third Quest: Article 22.6 Arbitrators' Statements With Regard to the Purpose of Retaliation
IV. Fourth Quest: Interpretation of Article 22 of the DSU in Accordance with the Customary Rules of Interpretation to Clarify the Purposes of WTO Retaliation
6. Retaliation to Induce an Amicable Settlement as Another Competing Purpose and the Effectiveness of WTO Retaliation
I. Amicable Settlements in the Multilateral Trading System
II. The Question About the Effectiveness of WTO Retaliation
III. A Way Forward
7. Concluding Remarks
I. Summary of the Book
II. Final Observations
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