After the completion of the Uruguay Round and the adoption of the 1994 agreement establishing the WTO, the place of international trade in the context of the international legal order has radically changed. International trade law has become a subject of wide-spread interest, cutting across traditional boundaries, and engaging diverse political and legal concerns. One consequence of this development is increasing concern with the legitimacy of the WTO process, which in turn has led to the WTO becoming the focus of rancorous protest by, among others, environmental NGOs, trade unions, and human rights activists.
This collection of essays by leading scholars and lawyers engaged in the policy-making process, addresses the underlying tensions and dilemmas of the WTO process and its impact upon the environment and human rights in particular. The contributors search for a balance between, on the one hand, legitimate free trade interests and, on the other, the role and limits of unilateral measures as an instrument to protect non-commercial values.
![]() Vol 13 No 8
August/Sept 2008
Cover: Statue by Laura Facey Cooper in Emancipation Park, Jamaica. Major New Titles published in August (pp. 1-23) August Subscriptions & Supplements (pp. 29-35) Visitors to Wildys (pp. 38-39) John Pethick at CARALL (pp. 41-44) Important Forthcoming Publications (pp. 45-49) Wildy Trips (p. 49) Wildy, Simmonds & Hill Publications (pp. 50-60) |
Index to Legal Citations and AbbreviationsEdited by:
ISBN: 184703604X
ISBN13: 9781847036049
Published: August 2008
Publisher: Sweet & Maxwell Ltd
Country of Publication: UK
Binding: Hardback
Price: £99.00
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