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Direct Effect of WTO Agreements: Practices and Arguments

by Chingwen Hsueh (Author)
©2012 Thesis 260 Pages

Summary

The book investigates the debates of the direct effect of WTO agreements. There are three reasons why the consideration of direct effect is significant. First, direct effect is concerned with the separation of powers, specifically with the extent of involvement of the judicial branch of the member state in enforcing its obligations. Second, the effectiveness of WTO agreements depends more and more on the cooperation of national courts. Several WTO agreements have circumvented the legislative branch and set forth specific rules that the executive branches of the members must respect. Third, direct effect relates to legal protection for individuals who engage in international trade and could grant greater protection for the interests of individuals. This research aims at giving answers to the debate of whether the direct effect of WTO agreements should be granted. The subordinated and interrelated aims are to clarify the positions of major members and their reasons, to search grounds for granting the direct effect of WTO agreements, and to identify the difficulties arising thereby.

Details

Pages
260
Year
2012
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631622278
Language
English
Keywords
democratic deficit international trade China Taiwan human rights international economic law
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2012. 260 pp.

Biographical notes

Chingwen Hsueh (Author)

Ching-Wen Hsueh graduated from the College of Law at National Taiwan University in 2005. She did an internship at the World Trade Organization and gained her doctorate in laws in 2011 at the University of Cologne.

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Title: Direct Effect of WTO Agreements: Practices and Arguments