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WTO Law and Developing Countries

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WTO Law and Developing Countries
By
George A. Bermann
Description
Developing
countries comprise the majority of the membership of the World Trade
Organization. Many developing countries believe that the welfare
gains that were supposed to ensue from the establishment of the WTO
and the results of the Uruguay Round remain largely elusive. Though
often aggregated under the ubiquitous banner ‘developing
countries’, their multilateral trade objectives - like their
underlying policy interests and the concerns - vary considerably from
country to country and are by no means homogenous. Coming off the
heels of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, the ongoing Doha Development
Round, launched in that Middle Eastern city in the fall of 2001 and
now on ‘life support’ so to speak, was inaugurated with
much fanfare as a means of addressing the difficulties that
developing countries face within the multilateral trading system.
Special and differential treatment provisions in the WTO agreement in
particular are the focus of much discussion in the ongoing round, and
voices for change have been multiplying, due to widespread
dissatisfaction with their effectiveness, enforceability, and
implementation.
Contents
Introduction
Petros Mavroidis and George Bermann; 1. The legal status of special
and differential treatment provisions under WTO agreements Edwini
Kessie; 2. Trade preferences to small developing countries Nuno Limao
and Marcela Olarreaga; 3. China in the WTO 2006: \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'Law and its
limitations in the context of TRIPS\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\' Frederick M. Abbott; 4.
Developing countries in the WTO service negotiations: doing enough?
Juan A. Marchetti; Comment on Marchetti Kal Raustiala; 5. Developing
countries and the protection of intellectual property rights: current
issues in the WTO Jayashree Watal; 6. Participation of developing
countries in the WTO- new evidence based on the 2003 official records
Hakan Nordstrom; Comment on Nordstrom Jeffrey Dunoff; 7. Developing
countries and GATT/WTO dispute settlement Marc Busch and Eric
Reinhardt; 8. Representing developing countries in WTO dispute
settlement proceedings Niall Meagher; Comment on Meagher Chad P.
Bown; 9. Compensation and retaliation: a developing country’s
perspective Mateo Diego-Fernandez; 10. A preference for development:
the law and economics of GSP Gene Grossman and Alan Sykes; Comments
on Grossman and Sykes: Joel Trachtman, Jeffrey Dunoff and Jeffrey
Kenner; 11. The GSP fallacy: a critique of the appellate body’s
ruling in the GSP case on legal, economic, and political/systemic
grounds Anastasios Tomazos; 12. Is the WTO doing enough for
developing countries? Patrick Low; Comment on Low Wilfred J. Ethier.
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