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Maritime Transport Services in the Law of the Sea and the World Trade Organization

by Chuyang Liu (Author)
©2009 Thesis XX, 318 Pages

Summary

Since the beginnings of international law, the law of the sea has been of paramount importance for international trade. Yet this area of law and international trade regulations have developed as two distinct areas with little interface with each other. As the GATT/WTO emerged in parallel to the LOS Convention since the 1970s, both bodies have made extensive efforts in international treaty making. However, the relationship between trade regulations and the law of the sea has hardly been explored.
The author examines some key aspects of this relationship, in particular port entry, access to cargo in coastal shipping (cabotage) and access to cargo in international shipping. The inclusion of services in WTO law will render this relationship of great importance in the future as the agreement extensively covers maritime transport. It is just a matter of time until the current exclusion of maritime transport under special exemptions will be reviewed in future negotiations. The book provides the background and a normative basis for approaching some of the problems which members of the WTO will have to address in coming years. It also deals briefly with the problem of choice of law and competing jurisdictions between trade law and maritime law.

Details

Pages
XX, 318
Year
2009
ISBN (Softcover)
9783034300995
Language
English
Keywords
Internationales Recht Commercial and transport law Specific legal theories
Published
Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2009. XX, 318 pp., 3 tables and graphs

Biographical notes

Chuyang Liu (Author)

The Author: Chuyang Liu obtained a Master of Law at Dalian Maritime University, China and a Master of Business Administration (MBA) at Victoria University, Australia. She was a researcher at the World Trade Institute in Berne and obtained her doctoral degree from the Faculty of Law of the University of Berne, Switzerland in 2007. The author has practical work experience in higher education, a law firm and large consultancy companies in China and Australia. Since completing her dissertation, the author has worked as a senior advisor at an international professional services company in Australia.

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Title: Maritime Transport Services in the Law of the Sea and the World Trade Organization