One view of obligations under the WTO Agreement is that they are bilateral, that is, they involve legal obligations between two countries. This is premised on the idea that the object of WTO obligations is \u27trade\u27. According to this view, the WTO Agreement can be considered a \u27bundle of bilateral relations\u27 and WTO obligations should be analysed pursuant to rules concerning bilateral obligations under the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties and the Articles on State Responsibility. This article takes a different position. It posits that WTO obligations are more appropriately regarded as collective because their principal object is the protection of collective expectations about the trade-related behaviour of governments. Th...
The establishment of the World Trade Organization ( WTO ), which replaced the five decades of the Ge...
The paper addresses the question if the remedies for violations of WTO obligations are also availabl...
The limits of international trade must be understood within the context of the institutional framewo...
An important, though oft neglected, distinction between multilateral treaty obligations separates ob...
In his paper, Professor Pauwelyn argues that pursuant to Article 31(3)(c) of the Vienna Convention o...
The creation of the World Trade Organization in 1994 has left open the question of whether we can id...
This paper examines the role of general international law in the World Trade Organization (WTO) regi...
The article discusses the legal nature of the obligations deriving from participation in the World T...
This Article argues that the U.S. and EC views of the national security interests exceptions reflect...
DECLARATION I, Jelena Baeumler declare that this is an original work done by me and has never been s...
Interdependence is a theme in international trade law. It pervades virtually every aspect of the law...
WTO disputes form an important part of the way we think about WTO law today. Nevertheless, given the...
Social human rights are not held to belong to the category of jus cogens norms. At the same time the...
Presented at the University of Tuebingen, 14-16 October 2004 Conference on Changing Patterns of Aut...
Presented at Palma Workshop, 20-21 May 2005, on Unity and Fragmentation in International Law
The establishment of the World Trade Organization ( WTO ), which replaced the five decades of the Ge...
The paper addresses the question if the remedies for violations of WTO obligations are also availabl...
The limits of international trade must be understood within the context of the institutional framewo...
An important, though oft neglected, distinction between multilateral treaty obligations separates ob...
In his paper, Professor Pauwelyn argues that pursuant to Article 31(3)(c) of the Vienna Convention o...
The creation of the World Trade Organization in 1994 has left open the question of whether we can id...
This paper examines the role of general international law in the World Trade Organization (WTO) regi...
The article discusses the legal nature of the obligations deriving from participation in the World T...
This Article argues that the U.S. and EC views of the national security interests exceptions reflect...
DECLARATION I, Jelena Baeumler declare that this is an original work done by me and has never been s...
Interdependence is a theme in international trade law. It pervades virtually every aspect of the law...
WTO disputes form an important part of the way we think about WTO law today. Nevertheless, given the...
Social human rights are not held to belong to the category of jus cogens norms. At the same time the...
Presented at the University of Tuebingen, 14-16 October 2004 Conference on Changing Patterns of Aut...
Presented at Palma Workshop, 20-21 May 2005, on Unity and Fragmentation in International Law
The establishment of the World Trade Organization ( WTO ), which replaced the five decades of the Ge...
The paper addresses the question if the remedies for violations of WTO obligations are also availabl...
The limits of international trade must be understood within the context of the institutional framewo...