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Ubiquitous Trio: China, Wto And United States Of America, Yuliya Kostelova Dec 2010

Ubiquitous Trio: China, Wto And United States Of America, Yuliya Kostelova

Yuliya Kostelova

No abstract provided.


Heads I Win, Tails You Lose: Uncertainty And The Protection Of Biodiversity From Invasive Alien Species, Sophie Riley Nov 2010

Heads I Win, Tails You Lose: Uncertainty And The Protection Of Biodiversity From Invasive Alien Species, Sophie Riley

Sophie Riley

Scientists anticipate that the problem of invasive alien species will be exacerbated by co-stressors of biodiversity, such as land clearing and climate change. One of the most effective means of regulating invasive alien species is to prevent their entry by implementing rigorous quarantine measures with strong border controls. Yet, regulators face constant uncertainty with regard to the impact of invasive alien species on biodiversity, and the need to navigate a range of opinions on how best to deal with uncertainty. These difficulties are illustrated by the differing approaches to uncertainty embodied by the World Trade Organization on the one hand …


Disputes Related To Healthcare Across National Boundaries: The Potential For Arbitration, Deth Sao Nov 2010

Disputes Related To Healthcare Across National Boundaries: The Potential For Arbitration, Deth Sao

Deth Sao

Trade in international health services has the potential to play a leading role in the global economy, but its rapid growth is impeded by legal barriers. Advances in technology and cross-border movement of people and health services create legal ambiguities and uncertainties for businesses and consumers involved in transnational medical malpractice disputes. Existing legal protections and remedies afforded by traditional judicial frameworks are unable to resolve the following challenges: (1) assertion of personal jurisdiction; (2) choice of forum and law considerations; (3) appropriate theories of liability for injuries and damages arising from innovations in medical care and delivery of health …


China’S Gigantic Appetite For Natural Resources Spurs Multilateral Concerns, Yuliya Kostelova Nov 2010

China’S Gigantic Appetite For Natural Resources Spurs Multilateral Concerns, Yuliya Kostelova

Yuliya Kostelova

China is the second largest economy in the world today. Its economic growth is unbridled and expansion is rampant. A rapidly growing communistic state with an attempt for capitalistic market is alarming in the international economic community. China’s insatiable oil appetite creates various concerns among major sovereign partners. Notwithstanding, China is fully committed to its economic development in the future regardless of widely expressed multilateral concerns.


Rebates, Subsidies, And Carbon Regulation: The Ascm And Climate Policy, Tristan Brown Oct 2010

Rebates, Subsidies, And Carbon Regulation: The Ascm And Climate Policy, Tristan Brown

Tristan R Brown

In 2009 the United States House of Representatives passed cap-and-trade legislation in the form of the American Clean Energy and Security Act. This legislation may violate certain provisions of the Agreement on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures, to which the United States is a party to. In particular, the legislation may violate the sections of the Agreement prohibiting the allocation of government subsidies to domestic industries. This paper explores the aspects of the legislation that are most likely to violate the Agreement and discusses alternative methods of regulating carbon that are compatible with it.


The 2009 Eu Regulation On Trade In Seal Products, Mohamed Coulibaly Oct 2010

The 2009 Eu Regulation On Trade In Seal Products, Mohamed Coulibaly

Mohamed Coulibaly

This paper assesses the justifiability of trade-related measure for the purpose of protecting the environment. It analyzes a new regulation adopted by the European Communities to ban trade in seal products derived from commercial hunting. The measure has been challenged under the WTO rules by two major sealing countries -Norway and Canada, on the ground that it violates the EC obligations under those rules. After analyzing relevant WTO jurisprudence, the paper concludes that the EC regulation violates the EC obligations but, is justifiable under the General exceptions of the GATT 1994, and does not constitutes a technical regulation under the …


The Year Of The Tiger, The Thrill Of The Fight: Why Conservation Should Not Succumb To Commerce, Tricia S. Patel Sep 2010

The Year Of The Tiger, The Thrill Of The Fight: Why Conservation Should Not Succumb To Commerce, Tricia S. Patel

Tricia S Patel

The Year of the Tiger, The Thrill of the Fight: Why Conservation Should Not Succumb to Commerce This paper discusses the international and domestic regulation of tigers and recent conservation methods adopted under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Flora and Fauna (CITES). With the illicit wildlife trade being the third largest form of trafficking, the author focuses on the role of China and its domestic policies, with a discussion on the use of tiger parts in the practice of Traditional Chinese Medicine. Additionally, the author discusses China's adoption of tiger farms as the predominant method …


Transborder Licensing: New Frontier For Job Creation, Andrea L. Johnson Sep 2010

Transborder Licensing: New Frontier For Job Creation, Andrea L. Johnson

Andrea L Johnson

Abstract: TRANSBORDER LICENSING: NEW FRONTIER FOR JOB CREATION http://ssrn.com/abstract=1675285 (September, 11 2010). Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1675286 By Professor Andrea L. Johnson, alj@cwsl.edu California Western School of Law 225 Cedar St. San Diego, CA 92101 (619) 525-1474 This article makes the case that the best opportunities for creating new jobs in the United States will come from transborder licensing. Transborder licensing involves the creation and disposition of intellectual property (IP), such as copyrights, patents, trademarks, and trade secrets, across geographical boundaries. Licensing is a contractual agreement in which the owner of IP, called the licensor, agrees to permit or restrict the …


The U.B.S. Case: The U.S. Attack On Swiss Banking Sovereignty, Beckett G. Cantley Aug 2010

The U.B.S. Case: The U.S. Attack On Swiss Banking Sovereignty, Beckett G. Cantley

Beckett G Cantley

On August 1, 2006, the United States Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations (“PSI”), a branch of the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs, released a report in conjunction with a Senate hearing that revealed alarming statistics regarding wealthy Americans’ love affair with offshore banking. The PSI report was a culmination of the subcommittee’s investigation into tax haven abuses, providing the most detailed look to date of high-level tax schemes. The report revealed such an alarming number of rich Americans are using offshore accounts to evade taxes that law enforcement is unable to control the growing misconduct. Senator Carl Levin …


Is It Greek Or Déjà Vu All Over Again?: Neoliberalism, And Winners And Losers Of International Debt Crises, Tayyab Mahmud Aug 2010

Is It Greek Or Déjà Vu All Over Again?: Neoliberalism, And Winners And Losers Of International Debt Crises, Tayyab Mahmud

Tayyab Mahmud

The global financial meltdown and the Great Recession of 2007-09 have brought into sharp relief the uneven distribution of gain and pain in economic crises. The 2009-10 debt crisis of Greece has resulted in a windfall for financial institutions at the expense of tax-payers, a rollback of welfare systems, and impoverishment of the working classes. This result is in tune with a pattern evidenced by the ubiquitous international debt crises of the last three decades, including the Latin American crisis of the 1980s, and the Asian crisis of 1990s. The recurrent international debt crises of the last three decades and …


Trade, The Environment, And State Environmental Health Law, Doug Farquhar Aug 2010

Trade, The Environment, And State Environmental Health Law, Doug Farquhar

Doug Farquhar

Many advocates of environmental health, in fact, many public policymakers, pay little attention to trade laws. These laws, which govern international trade and allow for globalization, have little enforcement powers and speak even less on health, safety, and the regulation of the environment. Yet by their design and implementation have altered, amended and outright banned laws and policies designed to protect the public’s safety. This paper discusses two areas of international trade: the North American Free Trade Agreement Side Agreement on the Environment and Chapter 11 of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), and how these agreements prohibit states …


Making Wto Remedies Work For Developing Nations: The Need For Class Actions, Phoenix X. Cai Aug 2010

Making Wto Remedies Work For Developing Nations: The Need For Class Actions, Phoenix X. Cai

Phoenix X. Cai

Making WTO Remedies Work for Developing Nations: The Need for Class Actions

Abstract

Developing nations comprise more than four-fifths of the membership of the World Trade Organization (“WTO”). Yet, they seldom participate in the WTO’s powerful dispute settlement process. This is problematic because the WTO is essentially a self-enforcing system of reciprocal trade rights that relies on proactive monitoring and enforcement by all members. Use of the self-enforcement mechanism – by initiating cases under the WTO’s Dispute Settlement Understanding (“DSU”) - is critical.

There are five primary reasons why developing nations do not actively invoke the DSU. This Article argues …


Trade, Labor And International Governance: An Inquiry Into The Potential Effectiveness Of The New International Labor Law, Kevin Banks Aug 2010

Trade, Labor And International Governance: An Inquiry Into The Potential Effectiveness Of The New International Labor Law, Kevin Banks

Kevin Banks

Globalization has led states and civil society groups to seek new and more effective governance in international labor law. The United States and Canada have each concluded a path-breaking, controversial and still-evolving series of international trade-related labor agreements with their trading partners. These agreements, and ongoing critiques that continue to influence their development, have been shaped by a particular model of governance. That model seeks, in the interests of effectiveness, a set of sharply defined rules and court-like adjudication processes directly linked to economic sanctions. The potential effectiveness of this governance model has received no systematic evaluation. This article undertakes …


Teaching Negotiation To A Globally Diverse Audience: Ethics, Morality And Cultural Differences, David Allen Larson, Vanessa Seyman Aug 2010

Teaching Negotiation To A Globally Diverse Audience: Ethics, Morality And Cultural Differences, David Allen Larson, Vanessa Seyman

David Allen Larson

"Teaching Negotiation to a Globally Diverse Audience: Ethics, Morality, and Cultural Differences" (by David Allen Larson and Vanessa Seyman) This is a short article discussing the challenges of teaching negotiation, and also the challenge of actually negotiating, in a globally diverse environment. Issues of ethics, morality and culture can surface quite quickly when teaching and negotiating in a multicultural environment. The article builds upon our recent experiences as participants in the Second Generation Global Negotiation conference held Istanbul, Turkey. The article provides examples of how cultural and language differences can impact both actual negotiations and negotiation teaching and provides suggestions …


How The Global Crime Syndicates Fuel Planet Destruction, Global Alliance Jul 2010

How The Global Crime Syndicates Fuel Planet Destruction, Global Alliance

Global Alliance

since 1945 more environmental planet destruction has been fuelled and financed with ever more leveraged debt than in the previous 60 million years - it's applied terrorism against the global life support system under the protection racket of a corrupt law profession


Anti-Dumping And Distrust: Reducing Anti-Dumping Duties Under The W.T.O. Through Heightened Scrutiny, Reid Bolton Jul 2010

Anti-Dumping And Distrust: Reducing Anti-Dumping Duties Under The W.T.O. Through Heightened Scrutiny, Reid Bolton

Reid Bolton

The W.T.O’s anti-dumping provisions are widely recognized as a barrier to free trade that caters to members’ protectionist impulses. Even as the W.T.O. has made significant progress in removing most other barriers to trade, the number of anti-dumping duties has continued to climb. This paper proposes a new method for reducing the impact of antidumping duties based on recent scholarship that suggests that legal capacity is the single most important factor preventing countries from challenging duties assessed against them in front of the W.T.O.’s dispute resolution body. This proposal, grounded in the “strict scrutiny” standard developed in U.S. law, suggests …


Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags: Non-Market Economy Status And U.S. Unfair Trade Actions Against Vietnam, David A. Gantz Jul 2010

Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags: Non-Market Economy Status And U.S. Unfair Trade Actions Against Vietnam, David A. Gantz

David A Gantz

Like China, Vietnam was required as a condition of WTO accession to accept that other WTO Members would be able to use non-market-economy methodology for an extended period (2018 in the case of Vietnam) when bringing antidumping actions against Vietnamese producers. Vietnam also agreed to the use of special non-national “benchmarks” for calculating the benefits derived from certain government subsidy programs when those programs were challenged under national countervailing duty actions. In 2009, the U.S Department of Commerce brought its first CVD action against Vietnam, Polyethylene Retail Carrier Bags. This article reviews the history of such actions against Vietnam (and …


Liability For Trademark Infringement For Internet Service Providers, Katja G. Weckstrom Jul 2010

Liability For Trademark Infringement For Internet Service Providers, Katja G. Weckstrom

Katja G Weckstrom

ABSTRACT Liability for Trademark Infringement for Internet Service Providers Katja Weckström*

At the wake of the millennium and the rise of the internet, legislative action was taken to shelter internet service providers (ISPs) from various forms of legal action. In the turmoil of chartering new and unregulated territory, such a safe harbor was deemed necessary to protect up-starting businesses. Today, these internet actors e.g. Google, Amazon and eBay have grown strong and powerful. Thus, intellectual property holders have started to challenge this privilege in court. Increasingly, owners of famous marks seek liability and damages for direct and indirect trademark infringement …


The United States – Korea Free Trade Agreement:, Y.S. Lee Jun 2010

The United States – Korea Free Trade Agreement:, Y.S. Lee

Y.S. Lee

The U.S.-Korea Free Trade Agreement, currently awaiting ratification of legislatures of both countries, is known to be the most significant bilateral trade agreement since the conclusion of the North America Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). Both governments have promoted the U.S.-Korea FTA as the trade agreement that will enhance trade between the two countries and promote economic prosperity. The article critically reviews the inherent features of the U.S.-Korea FTA and examines whether the FTA is expected to promote the promised economic prosperity.


A Policy Of Disregarding Public Policy: Pursuing The Comity Of Nations In Private International Law, Anthony Bessette May 2010

A Policy Of Disregarding Public Policy: Pursuing The Comity Of Nations In Private International Law, Anthony Bessette

Anthony Bessette

Private agreements stipulating the forum, procedure, and substantive law to govern commercial relationships have become a common feature of international business. Companies that enter international contracts, and thus the economies of their countries to an extent, rely on them for certainty and stability. Almost all countries that honor foreign jurisdiction clauses reserve an exception for public policy. U.S. law has drifted from international standards and its modern roots in Bremen by narrowing its public policy exception to the vanishing point. This article examine the history of foreign jurisdiction clauses, the way other countries approach them, and recent developments which may …


Tax First, Ask Questions Later: Problems Predicting The Effect Of Obama's International Tax Reforms, Timothy H. Shapiro Apr 2010

Tax First, Ask Questions Later: Problems Predicting The Effect Of Obama's International Tax Reforms, Timothy H. Shapiro

Timothy H Shapiro

The Obama Administration has proposed a dramatic reworking of the way US corporations are taxed on income they earn outside the US. Although less prominent than other Washington policy debates, these changes are no less contentious. The result is either a fairer tax system yielding the government an extra $210 billion, or the end of US-based multinational corporations, depending on who one asks. Yet both sides of the debate have opted for rhetorical simplicity over accuracy, sidestepping sixty years of theoretical scholarship on the subject. The world economy is a dynamic system, and the current projections of US companies’ reactions …


Mohammed Jawad And The Failure Of The Guantanamo Military Commissions, David J. Frakt Apr 2010

Mohammed Jawad And The Failure Of The Guantanamo Military Commissions, David J. Frakt

David J Frakt

In order to justify outrageous treatment of detainees at Guantanamo during the early years of the “Global War on Terror” it was necessary to portray the detainees as hardened terrorist criminals. But it was not enough to simply label them as such; the Bush Administration knew that in order to maintain popular support for their detention policies, they would have to convict a critical mass of the detainees in some sort of legal proceedings.

The problem for the Bush Administration was that few of the detainees were actually involved in any terrorist criminal activity. Fewer still had committed any offenses …


U.S. International Obligations And The Relation Between The States And The Federal Government: The Case Of Wto- Government Procurement Agreement, Carlos L. Rodriguez Apr 2010

U.S. International Obligations And The Relation Between The States And The Federal Government: The Case Of Wto- Government Procurement Agreement, Carlos L. Rodriguez

Carlos L. Rodriguez

In my article U.S. International Obligations and the Relation between the States and the Federal Government: the case of WTO- Government Procurement Agreement I intend to give a fresh look to the legal implications of trade agreements for sub-national governments. Particularly I look at the United States in the context of the implementation of the WTO Uruguay Round Agreements. Among other issues, I assess the abilities of states governments and the territories to regulate certain commercial activities, despite the U.S. participation in international trade agreements. The article attempts to address complicated legal questions such as how the US legal establishment …


Beyond Culture Vs. Commerce: Decentralizing Cultural Protection To Promote Diversity Through Trade, Sean Andrew Pager Apr 2010

Beyond Culture Vs. Commerce: Decentralizing Cultural Protection To Promote Diversity Through Trade, Sean Andrew Pager

Sean Pager

Do culture and commerce conflict? The assumption that trade is incompatible with cultural diversity has disrupted economic liberalization, distorted world trade law, and damaged Europe’s film industry. A new wave of cultural protectionism now threatens to engulf e-commerce. Yet, as American appeals to fully liberalize audiovisual markets continue to fall on deaf ears, the real question is not whether to protect culture, but how. European protectionism has failed. South Korea shows there is a better way. Eschewing Europe’s top-down patronage model, Korean policy-makers have pursued a decentralized approach to develop their audiovisual industries. Deploying indirect subsidies ranging from tax incentives …


Fighting Homogenization: The Global Infiltration Of Technology And The Struggle To Preserve Cultural Distinctiveness., Saptarishi Bandopadhyay Apr 2010

Fighting Homogenization: The Global Infiltration Of Technology And The Struggle To Preserve Cultural Distinctiveness., Saptarishi Bandopadhyay

Saptarishi Bandopadhyay

While technology and globalization continue to pervade every aspect of the world, the scope for the sustenance of national or regional culture is rapidly disappearing. This paper will seek to use the lessons and experiences obtained through the controversies in the use of Direct Broadcasting Satellites in its more initial years and apply the same to the Internet to assess its effect on the culture of developing States. The eventual thesis proposed here argues that the freedom of information upheld through technology, and the human right to culture need not be seen as perpendicular interests, but that the latter may …


Cheaters Shouldn't Prosper And Consumers Shouldn't Suffer: The Need For Governmental Enforcement Against Economic Adulteration Of 100% Pomegranate Juice And Other Imported Food Products, Michael T. Roberts Mar 2010

Cheaters Shouldn't Prosper And Consumers Shouldn't Suffer: The Need For Governmental Enforcement Against Economic Adulteration Of 100% Pomegranate Juice And Other Imported Food Products, Michael T. Roberts

Michael T. Roberts Esq.

ABSTRACT

This article examines the failure of government agencies, including the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, to enforce against the adulteration of economically adulterated imported food product. The problem of economic adulteration has emerged in the modern global food system as a serious threat to the health of consumers, the economic livelihoods of honest purveyors of food, and the integrity of national food regulatory systems. These consequences were recently evidenced by the China melamine scandal that sickened and killed both infants and pets.

This article addresses the problem of a lack of enforcement against economic adulteration through the prism of …


A Comparison Of The Income Tax Systems In The United States And Germany: The Rugged Individualist Meets The Social Activist, Walter Schwidetzky Mar 2010

A Comparison Of The Income Tax Systems In The United States And Germany: The Rugged Individualist Meets The Social Activist, Walter Schwidetzky

Walter D Schwidetzky

There is more than one road up the mountain. Different countries find different solutions to raising revenues and taxing their citizens. The United States tends to be a bit inbred about tax policy decisions, rarely looking outside of its own borders for answers. Yet other countries may have looked at a given issue and come up with intelligent answers that could helpfully inform U.S. decisions. The converse is, of course, also the case. One of the striking things about doing comparative tax analysis is how differently, but legitimately, different countries can answer the same question. There also times when one …


It Takes Two To Tango, And To Mediate: Legal Cultural And Other Factors Influencing United States And Latin American Lawyers' Resistance To Mediating Commercial Disputes, Don Peters Mar 2010

It Takes Two To Tango, And To Mediate: Legal Cultural And Other Factors Influencing United States And Latin American Lawyers' Resistance To Mediating Commercial Disputes, Don Peters

Don Peters

This article examines legal cultural and other factors influencing the resistance displayed by United States and Latin American lawyers to mediating commercial disputes. After surveying current contexts in which commercial mediation occurs in the United States and Latin American countries and summarizing data regarding commercial actors’ knowledge concerning the benefits of mediating, it analyzes the relatively infrequent use of mediation despite knowledge of its potential advantages over adjudicating. Focusing on lawyers, the article next explores factors that influence U.S. and Latin American lawyers when they converse with commercial clients about selecting dispute resolution methods. Analyzing similarities arising from universal decision-making …


The Road To Nowhere: Caterpillar V. Usinor And Cisg Claims By Downstream Buyers Against Remote Sellers, Donald J. Smythe Mar 2010

The Road To Nowhere: Caterpillar V. Usinor And Cisg Claims By Downstream Buyers Against Remote Sellers, Donald J. Smythe

Donald J. Smythe

The UN Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (CISG) was intended to unify international sales law and facilitate the expansion of international trade. It was, however, the product of a bargain between representatives from diverse legal systems and its rules are spare. This invites parties to international sales disputes to argue that its preemptive effect is narrow and that domestic legal rules should be used to fill the gaps. Courts are notoriously prone to the “homeward trend bias” and have frequently accepted such arguments. In Caterpillar v. Usinor the federal district court for the Northern District of …


Beyond Culture Vs. Commerce Decentralizing Cultural Protection To Promote Diversity Through Trade, Sean Pager Mar 2010

Beyond Culture Vs. Commerce Decentralizing Cultural Protection To Promote Diversity Through Trade, Sean Pager

Sean Pager

No abstract provided.