Bültmann & Gerriets
The Oxford Handbook on the World Trade Organization
von Martin Daunton, Amrita Narlikar, Robert M. Stern
Verlag: Oxford University Press(UK)
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-0-19-871477-4
Erschienen am 07.08.2014
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 244 mm [H] x 170 mm [B] x 47 mm [T]
Gewicht: 1483 Gramm
Umfang: 878 Seiten

Preis: 65,20 €
keine Versandkosten (Inland)


Dieser Titel wird erst bei Bestellung gedruckt. Eintreffen bei uns daher ca. am 23. Juli.

Der Versand innerhalb der Stadt erfolgt in Regel am gleichen Tag.
Der Versand nach außerhalb dauert mit Post/DHL meistens 1-2 Tage.

klimaneutral
Der Verlag produziert nach eigener Angabe noch nicht klimaneutral bzw. kompensiert die CO2-Emissionen aus der Produktion nicht. Daher übernehmen wir diese Kompensation durch finanzielle Förderung entsprechender Projekte. Mehr Details finden Sie in unserer Klimabilanz.
Klappentext
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Biografische Anmerkung

The Oxford Handbook on the World Trade Organization provides an authoritative and cutting-edge account of the World Trade Organization - what it does, how it goes about fulfilling its tasks, its achievements and problems, and how it might contend with some critical challenges.



  • Introduction

  • Part I: Theory of Multilateral Trade Liberalization

  • 1: Robert E. Baldwin: The Case for a Multilateral Trade Organization

  • 2: Martin Daunton: The Inconsistent Quartet: Free Trade Versus Competing Goals

  • 3: Judith Goldstein: Trade Liberalization and Domestic Politics

  • Part II: Institutional Evolution: Building up the World Trade Organization

  • 4: Richard Toye: International Trade Organization

  • 5: Thomas Zeiler: The expanding mandate of the GATT: The First Seven Rounds

  • 6: Ernest Preeg: Uruguay Round Negotiations and the Creation of the WTO

  • Part III: The Process Behind the Workings of the WTO

  • 7: Richard Blackhurst: The Role of the Director-General and the Secretariat

  • 8: Marion Jansen: Defining the Borders of the WTO Agenda

  • 9: Amrita Narlikar: Collective Agency, Systemic Consequences: Bargaining Coalitions in the WTO

  • Part IV: Agency in the WTO

  • 10: Patrick Messerlin: The Influence of the EU in the World Trade System

  • 11: Todd Allee: The Role of the US : A Multi-level explanation for Decreased Support over Time

  • 12: Brendan Vickers: The Role of the B(R)ICS: System supporters or Change agents in the WTO?

  • 13: Shishir Priyadarshi and Taufiqur Rahman: Least Developed Countries: Growing Voice

  • 14: Jens Steffek: Awkward Partners: NGOs and Social Movements in the WTO

  • 15: Steven McGuire: What happened to the Influence of Bussines? Corporations and Organised Labour in the WTO

  • Part V: The Substance of the Agreements

  • 16: Trade in Manufactures and Agricultural Products: The Dangerous Link? (Helen Coskeran, Dan Kim, Amrita Narlikar)

  • 17: Rudolf Adlung: Trade in Services in the WTO: From Marrakech (1994) to Doha (2001) to...

  • 18: Keith Maskus: Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs)

  • 19: Michael Finger: Rules: Anti-dumping, Countervailing Duties, and Safeguards

  • 20: Robert Howse: Regulatory Measures: SPS, TBT, Customs Valuation

  • Part VI: Implementation and Enforcement

  • 21: Sam Laird and Raymundo Valdès: Trade Policy Review Mechanism

  • 22: Thomas Bernauer, Manfred Elsig, and Joost Pauwelyn: Dispute Settlement Mechanism - Analysis and Problems

  • 23: Mitsuo Matsushita: DSM - The Appellate Body - Assessment and Problems

  • 24: Gregory Shaffer and Joel Trachtman: Interpretation and Institutional Choice at the WTO

  • 25: Alan O. Sykes: The DSM: Ensuring Compliance?

  • Part VII: Challenges to the System

  • 26: Manfred Elsig and Cedric Dupont: Persistent Deadlock at Doha

  • 27: Thomas Cottier: The Role of Domestic Courts in the Implementation of WTO Law: The Political Economy of Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances

  • 28: Richard Baldwin: Preferential Trading Arrangements

  • 29: Tim Josling: New Issues in Food, Agriculture, and Natural Resources

  • Part VIII: Ethical Issues

  • 30: Andrew G. Brown and Robert M. Stern: Fairness in the WTO Trading System

  • 31: Drusilla Brown: Labour Standards and Human Rights

  • 32: Meera Fickling and Gary Hufbauer: Trade and the Environment

  • Part IX: Reform of the WTO and Global Economic Governance

  • 33: Bernard Hoekman: Proposals for Reform: A Synthesis and Assessment

  • 34: Steven Bernstein and Erin Hannah: The WTO and Institutional (In)Coherence

  • Introduction

  • Part I: Theory of Multilateral Trade Liberalization

  • 1: Robert E. Baldwin: The Case for a Multilateral Trade Organization

  • 2: Martin Daunton: The Inconsistent Quartet: Free Trade Versus Competing Goals

  • 3: Judith Goldstein: Trade Liberalization and Domestic Politics

  • Part II: Institutional Evolution: Building up the World Trade Organization

  • 4: Richard Toye: International Trade Organization

  • 5: Thomas Zeiler: The expanding mandate of the GATT: The First Seven Rounds

  • 6: Ernest Preeg: Uruguay Round Negotiations and the Creation of the WTO

  • Part III: The Process Behind the Workings of the WTO

  • 7: Richard Blackhurst: The Role of the Director-General and the Secretariat

  • 8: Marion Jansen: Defining the Borders of the WTO Agenda

  • 9: Amrita Narlikar: Collective Agency, Systemic Consequences: Bargaining Coalitions in the WTO

  • Part IV: Agency in the WTO

  • 10: Patrick Messerlin: The Influence of the EU in the World Trade System

  • 11: Todd Allee: The Role of the US : A Multi-level explanation for Decreased Support over Time

  • 12: Brendan Vickers: The Role of the B(R)ICS: System supporters or Change agents in the WTO?

  • 13: Shishir Priyadarshi and Taufiqur Rahman: Least Developed Countries: Growing Voice

  • 14: Jens Steffek: Awkward Partners: NGOs and Social Movements in the WTO

  • 15: Steven McGuire: What happened to the Influence of Bussines? Corporations and Organised Labour in the WTO

  • Part V: The Substance of the Agreements

  • 16: Trade in Manufactures and Agricultural Products: The Dangerous Link? (Helen Coskeran, Dan Kim, Amrita Narlikar)

  • 17: Rudolf Adlung: Trade in Services in the WTO: From Marrakech (1994) to Doha (2001) to...

  • 18: Keith Maskus: Trade Related Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPs)

  • 19: Michael Finger: Rules: Anti-dumping, Countervailing Duties, and Safeguards

  • 20: Robert Howse: Regulatory Measures: SPS, TBT, Customs Valuation

  • Part VI: Implementation and Enforcement

  • 21: Sam Laird and Raymundo Valdès: Trade Policy Review Mechanism

  • 22: Thomas Bernauer, Manfred Elsig, and Joost Pauwelyn: Dispute Settlement Mechanism - Analysis and Problems

  • 23: Mitsuo Matsushita: DSM - The Appellate Body - Assessment and Problems

  • 24: Gregory Shaffer and Joel Trachtman: Interpretation and Institutional Choice at the WTO

  • 25: Alan O. Sykes: The DSM: Ensuring Compliance?

  • Part VII: Challenges to the System

  • 26: Manfred Elsig and Cedric Dupont: Persistent Deadlock at Doha

  • 27: Thomas Cottier: The Role of Domestic Courts in the Implementation of WTO Law: The Political Economy of Separation of Powers and Checks and Balances

  • 28: Richard Baldwin: Preferential Trading Arrangements

  • 29: Tim Josling: New Issues in Food, Agriculture, and Natural Resources

  • Part VIII: Ethical Issues

  • 30: Andrew G. Brown and Robert M. Stern: Fairness in the WTO Trading System

  • 31: Drusilla Brown: Labour Standards and Human Rights

  • 32: Meera Fickling and Gary Hufbauer: Trade and the Environment

  • Part IX: Reform of the WTO and Global Economic Governance

  • 33: Bernard Hoekman: Proposals for Reform: A Synthesis and Assessment

  • 34: Steven Bernstein and Erin Hannah: The WTO and Institutional (In)Coherence



Dr Amrita Narlikar is a Fellow of Darwin College, Cambridge. Her most recent books included New Powers: How to Become One and How to Manage Them, New York: Columbia University Press, London: Hurst, 2010 and (ed) Deadlocks in Multilateral Negotiations: Causes and Solutions, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010. She is the Director of Centre for Rising Powers, and University Senior Lecturer at the Department of Politics and International Studies, University of Cambridge.
Professor Martin Daunton works on the history of economic and social policy, most recently with respect to taxation, and is currently completing a book on the economic government of the world since the Second World War. He is Professor of Economic History in the University of Cambridge and Master of Trinity Hall.
Robert M. Stern has published numerous articles and books over the years in international trade and finance. His current research focuses on issues of WTO governance and related social policies. He is Professor Emeritus of Economics and Public Policy at the University of Michigan and currently a Visiting Professor at the Goldman School of Public Policy at UC-Berkeley.


andere Formate