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Vanderbilt University Law School

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GATT

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Table Talk: Around The Table Of The Appellate Body Of The World Trade Organization, James Bacchus Jan 2002

Table Talk: Around The Table Of The Appellate Body Of The World Trade Organization, James Bacchus

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

In this Article, James Bacchus describes his experiences as a "faceless foreign judge" of the World Trade Organization. In this capacity, Bacchus and his six colleagues on the WTO Appellate Body hear appeals in international trade disputes among the 144 member countries and other customs territories that are Members of the WTO. Bound by the WTO Rules of Conduct, he cannot comment on cases or the specific deliberation process, but rather comments on the processes and role of the Appellate Body relative to the WTO.


The Role Of Lawyers In The World Trade Organization, Peter D. Ehrenhaft Oct 2001

The Role Of Lawyers In The World Trade Organization, Peter D. Ehrenhaft

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

The World Trade Organization is a marvelously ambitious effort of now 140 countries to bring the rule of law to international trade. The WTO is a logical extension of the inspired ideas of the draftsmen of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), who recognized at the end of World War II that the seeds of that conflagration were sown, in part, by the chaotic condition of international trade following World War I.

During that inter-war period, the United States adopted its Antidumping Act of 1921 and its Smoot-Hawley Tariff Act of 1930. Both survive to this day. By …


Japan In The Ec: Changing Strategies For Changing Times, Andrea R. Reichel Apr 1992

Japan In The Ec: Changing Strategies For Changing Times, Andrea R. Reichel

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

This Note addresses the effects of European integration on Japanese-Community trade relations. It explores, in order, the effects of the customs union and the common customs tariff, the changing quota system, the Community's anti-dumping legislation and rules of origin, and voluntary export restraint agreements. The Note also considers the effect of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) on these trade relations. While recognizing that the Community is taking steps to impede Japanese investment in the Community, the author observes that some of these measures may be neither legal nor effective. The author concludes that Japan is well-positioned to …


Protecting First World Assets In The Third World: Intellectual Property Negotiations In The Gatt Multilateral Framework, Frederick M. Abbott Jan 1989

Protecting First World Assets In The Third World: Intellectual Property Negotiations In The Gatt Multilateral Framework, Frederick M. Abbott

Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law

This Article addresses industrialized countries' growing concerns over technology transfer and their efforts to obtain protection of intellectual property rights under the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT). Mr. Abbott analyzes the intellectual property problem in the context of the GATT framework and the weakness of current intellectual property protection. Developing countries do not accept the United States contention either that intellectual property is covered implicitly by the GATT or that the current lack of protection reflects a fundamental flaw in the General Agreement. Mr. Abbott focuses on this disagreement in laying out the framework for possible solutions, which …