Chapter 19 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) replaced court review of U.S. antidumping and countervailing duties with binding review by special binational panels of trade experts. It requires these panels to apply the same standard of review that U.S. courts use in trade remedy cases. Despite the centrality of this requirement to the Chapter 19 panel system, these panels have not adhered to this mandate. Chapter 19 panels overturn U.S. agency rulings much more often than the courts. In fact, they apply two different standards of review: exacting scrutiny where foreign producers and governments appeal, and near-absolute deference to agencies when U.S. industries appeal. In contrast, panels have shown great deference to Canad...
This Article critically examines the decision of the first dispute settlement panel established unde...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis analyzes Mexico's experience under the dispute r...
The only potentially unique aspect of NAFTA Chapter 11 is that the governments of two nations with d...
Chapter 19 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) replaced court review of U.S. antidump...
When the United States and Canada agreed to replace U.S. judicial review of trade-remedy cases with ...
Since World War II, international trade has expanded exponentially and the United States has had sub...
Chapter 19 of the NAFTA transfers judicial review of U.S., Canadian, and Mexican government investig...
The United States and Canada, and more recently Mexico, have tried to resolve certain types of inter...
NAFTA Chapter 19 sets up bilateral review panels to replace the domestic judicial appeals process of...
On January 1, 1994, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) entered into by and between Mexi...
This paper describes the themes in the Chapter 19 antidumping panel decisions that have developed ov...
In September 1988 the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement (FTA) received the approval of Congr...
There exists a perception that domestic adjudication is superior to international adjudication. The ...
Treatment of unfair trade laws has become an important topic in negotiations on preferential trading...
This paper examines the constitutionality of the binational panels of the North American Free Trade ...
This Article critically examines the decision of the first dispute settlement panel established unde...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis analyzes Mexico's experience under the dispute r...
The only potentially unique aspect of NAFTA Chapter 11 is that the governments of two nations with d...
Chapter 19 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) replaced court review of U.S. antidump...
When the United States and Canada agreed to replace U.S. judicial review of trade-remedy cases with ...
Since World War II, international trade has expanded exponentially and the United States has had sub...
Chapter 19 of the NAFTA transfers judicial review of U.S., Canadian, and Mexican government investig...
The United States and Canada, and more recently Mexico, have tried to resolve certain types of inter...
NAFTA Chapter 19 sets up bilateral review panels to replace the domestic judicial appeals process of...
On January 1, 1994, the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) entered into by and between Mexi...
This paper describes the themes in the Chapter 19 antidumping panel decisions that have developed ov...
In September 1988 the Canada-United States Free Trade Agreement (FTA) received the approval of Congr...
There exists a perception that domestic adjudication is superior to international adjudication. The ...
Treatment of unfair trade laws has become an important topic in negotiations on preferential trading...
This paper examines the constitutionality of the binational panels of the North American Free Trade ...
This Article critically examines the decision of the first dispute settlement panel established unde...
grantor: University of TorontoThis thesis analyzes Mexico's experience under the dispute r...
The only potentially unique aspect of NAFTA Chapter 11 is that the governments of two nations with d...