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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: William A. KerrPublisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd Imprint: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd ISBN: 9781849804486ISBN 10: 1849804486 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 28 December 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order ![]() Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsContents: Preface Part I: The Institutions of International Trade 1. A New World Chaos? International Institutions in the Information Age 2. Taming the Dragon: The WTO after the Accession of China co-authored with A.L. Hobbs 3. Homeland Security and the Rules of International Trade 4. A Club No More - The WTO after Doha Part II: Economic Issues in International Commercial Policy 5. International Harmonisation and the Gains from Trade 6. Dumping - One of Those Economic Myths 7. Special and Differential Treatment: A Mechanism to Promote Development? 8. Science-based Rules of Trade - A Mantra for Some, Anathema for Others 9. The Efficacy of TRIPS: Incentives, Capacity and Threats 10. Enjoying a Good Port with a Clear Conscience: Geographic Indicators, Rent Seeking and Development 11. Recession, International Trade and the Fallacies of Composition Part III: The Conduct of Trade Negotiations 12. Vested Interests in Queuing and the Loss of the WTO's Club Good: The Long-run Costs of US Bilateralism 13. Too Smart for Their Own Good! Complexity, Capacity and Credence in Trade Negotiations 14. Trade Agreements: The Important Role of Transparency 15. 'Waiting for Godot' or Riding the Orient Express? Trade Negotiations and the Global Audience Part IV: The Future of the International Trading System 16. Is it time to Re-think the WTO? A Return to the Basics 17. The Changing Nature of Protectionism: Are 'Free Traders' Up to the Challenges it Presents? 18. Who Should Make the Rules of Trade? The Complex Issue of Multilateral Environmental Agreements 19. Political Precaution, Pandemics and Protectionism 20. International Trade Education: Do We Need a New Model for the Global Market? IndexReviews'The Estey Centre Journal of International Law and Trade Policy has become required reading among trade policy specialists, not least for Bill Kerr's Editor's PagesA essay in each volume. Kerr has the ability in a dozen pages to engage, inform and entertain the reader with his careful scholarship, interesting choice of topic and highly-readable style. Kerr sets the tone for the volume and whets the appetite for the other articles. Over the ten years of the Estey Journal's life Kerr's pages have drawn our attention to a range of trade-law topics from the golf-club-like voting rules of the WTO to the delights of sipping incorrectly-labeled port. The decision to bring these twenty short papers together in a volume was inspired. Students and teachers will benefit from the convenience of the collection as source material for classes on trade law and policy. But above all, scholars in the fascinating area of the interplay of economics and law in multilateral trade institutions will have the wisdom of Bill Kerr readily to hand.' - Tim Josling, Stanford University, US `The Estey Centre Journal of International Law and Trade Policy has become required reading among trade policy specialists, not least for Bill Kerr's Editor's Pages essay in each volume. Kerr has the ability in a dozen pages to engage, inform and entertain the reader with his careful scholarship, interesting choice of topic and highly-readable style. Kerr sets the tone for the volume and whets the appetite for the other articles. Over the ten years of the Estey Journal's life Kerr's pages have drawn our attention to a range of trade-law topics from the golf-club-like voting rules of the WTO to the delights of sipping incorrectly-labeled port. The decision to bring these twenty short papers together in a volume was inspired. Students and teachers will benefit from the convenience of the collection as source material for classes on trade law and policy. But above all, scholars in the fascinating area of the interplay of economics and law in multilateral trade institutions will have the wisdom of Bill Kerr readily to hand.' -- Tim Josling, Stanford University, US Author InformationWilliam A. Kerr, University Distinguished Professor, Department of Agricultural and Resource Economics, University of Saskatchewan, Canada Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |