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Articles 1 - 8 of 8
Full-Text Articles in Law
Green Protectionism Is No Less Harmful Than Any Other Type, Sungjoon Cho
Green Protectionism Is No Less Harmful Than Any Other Type, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
No abstract provided.
A Long And Winding Road: The Doha Round Negotiation In The World Trade Organization, Sungjoon Cho
A Long And Winding Road: The Doha Round Negotiation In The World Trade Organization, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
This article provides a concise history of the Doha Round negotiation, analyzes its deadlock and offers some suggestions for a successful deal. The article observes that the nearly decade long negotiational stalemate is symptomatic of the diametrically opposed beliefs on the nature of the Round between developed and developing countries. While developed countries appear to be increasingly oblivious of Doha’s exigency, i.e., as a “development” round, developing countries vehemently condemn the developed countries’ narrow commercial focus on the Doha Round talks. It will not be easy to untie this Gordian knot since both Worlds tend to think that no deal …
Global Constitutional Lawmaking, Sungjoon Cho
Global Constitutional Lawmaking, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
An Identity Crisis Of International Organizations, Sungjoon Cho
An Identity Crisis Of International Organizations, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
An Identity Crisis of International Organizations
Abstract
International organizations (IOs) are ubiquitous. More than two hundred IOs touch our everyday lives, ranging banking to flu-shots. However, conventional political scientists seldom pay sufficient attention to IOs which they thoroughly deserve given their contemporary prominence. Because conventional international relations (IR) theories consider IOs as mere passive machineries, they hardly offer a satisfactory explanation on a distinctive mode of IOs’ institutional dynamic, in which a specific IO, as a separate and autonomous organic entity, grows, evolves and eventually makes sense of its own existence. This Essay offers a novel perspective which attempts to …
The World Trade Constitutional Court, Sungjoon Cho
The World Trade Constitutional Court, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
The World Trade Constitutional Court Sungjoon Cho Abstract Although a court, as a judicial organ, usually fulfils its mission by resolving specific disputes brought to it, it occasionally goes beyond this simple dispute-resolving function and more actively engages in building policies which define, and “constitute,” the very polity to which the court belongs, as was seen in Brown v. Board of Education. If this “constitutional adjudication” is an integral function of any domestic high court, could (and should) an international tribunal, in particular the World Trade Organization (WTO) tribunal, also play such a distinctive role? This paper contends that the …
Anticompetitive Trade Remedies: How Antidumping Measures Obstruct Market Competition, Sungjoon Cho
Anticompetitive Trade Remedies: How Antidumping Measures Obstruct Market Competition, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
No abstract provided.
Development By Moving People: Unearthing The Development Potential Of A Gats Visa, Sungjoon Cho
Development By Moving People: Unearthing The Development Potential Of A Gats Visa, Sungjoon Cho
Sungjoon Cho
No abstract provided.
Of The World Trade Court's Burden, Sungjoon Cho