Regulating health and environmental risks under WTO law : a critical analysis of the SPS agreement / Lukasz Gruszczynski.
2010
K3631 .G78 2010 (Map It)
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Author
Title
Regulating health and environmental risks under WTO law : a critical analysis of the SPS agreement / Lukasz Gruszczynski.
Published
Oxford ; New York, N.Y. : Oxford University Press, 2010.
Call Number
K3631 .G78 2010
ISBN
9780199578924 (hardback)
0199578923 (hardback)
0199578923 (hardback)
Description
xxiv, 301 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)471822552
Summary
"The last sixty years have witnessed an unprecedented expansion of international trade. The system created by the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade and later by the World Trade Organization (WTO) has proved to be an efficient instrument for the elimination of trade and tariff barriers. This process coincided with increased national regulatory controls, which were particularly visible in the area of risk regulation. Governments, responding to the demands of their domestic constituencies, have adopted a wide range of regulatory measures aimed at protecting the environment and health. Although, for the most part, new regulatory initiatives served legitimate objectives, it has also turned out that internal measures might become an attractive vehicle for protectionism, taking the place that was traditionally occupied by tariff barriers. The WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS Agreement) is an attempt by the international community to limit possible abuses while assuring WTO Members of an extensive margin of regulatory discretion." "The central problem that the book tackles is whether the system established by the SPS Agreement can address the existing and potential challenges of a new interdependent world. In answering this question, the author provides a comprehensive and critical examination of the substantive provisions of the Agreement and corresponding case law. In this context, the book particularly focuses on two issues: consistency in the interpretation of the SPS Agreement and the appropriateness of its various requirements. This analysis leads the author to conclude that despite some interpretative failures of SPS case law, the system established by the SPS Agreement seems to provide an effective solution for the supervision of domestic SPS measures."--BOOK JACKET.
Note
Revised version of author's thesis (doctoral)--European Union Institute, Florence, 2008.
Series statement on jacket.
Series statement on jacket.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages [283]-295) and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
1.
Risk and Risk Regulation
7
2.
The SPS Agreements within the WTO System
35
3.
Harmonization Disciplines of the SPS Agreement
75
4.
Science, Risk Assessment, and the SPS Agreement
107
5.
Precaution and the SPS Agreement
157
6.
Risk Management Disciplines and the SPS Agreement
219
7.
Concluding Remarks
271
Bibliography
283
Index
297