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The Cambridge Companion to World Trade Law offers expert but compact discussion of the diverse perspectives, enduring issues, and emergent challenges in the field. This volume offers a lively and thorough overview of the subject in all its dimensions. It takes stock of the state of the field of trade law without allowing current events to dominate key debates. It is intended to be appreciated not only by a legal audience as a collection of concise yet thoughtful reflective pieces, but also by readers across the fields of business, economics, finance, sociology, diplomacy, and international relations who may have no specialist trade law knowledge. It will appeal not only to the novice but also to the seasoned trade law expert who might wish to have at hand a single-volume compendium of current expert analysis across the different dimensions of trade law.
List of contents
1. Introduction to The Cambridge Companion to World Trade Law C. L. Lim and Joel P. Trachtman; Part I. Perspectives on World Trade Law: 2. Economics Patrick Low; 3. The political economy of international trade policy Michael J. Trebilcock; 4. Public international law and the WTO regime: environmental protection and trade integration Sunayana Sasmal and Petros Mavroidis; 5. Trade and development in an era of geopolitical crisis: a third world view Olabisi Akinkugbe; Part II. Enduring Issues in World Trade Law: 6. Discrimination in international trade law Simon Lester; 7. Disciplining (and ending) protectionism: tariffs and quotas Geraldo Vidigal; 8. Trade and contingent protection Jiangyu Wang; 9. Trade in services Panos Delimatsis; 10. Trade and the right to regulate Lauro Locks and Anastasiia Koltunova; 11. Intellectual property rights and trade C. L. Lim, Joel Trachtman and Michael J. Trebilcock; 12. Agriculture, food security and fisheries subsidies S. K. Sharma, Ahamed Ashiq Shajahan and Alisha Goswami; 13. State-owned enterprises Mitsuo Matsushita; 14. Regionalism and multilateralism Jo-Ann Crawford and Rohini Acharya; 15. Dispute settlement Jennifer Hillman; Part III. Emergent Challenges: 16. Liberalism in motion: the evolving boundaries of global trade governance Andrew Lang; 17. Geopolitical rivalry and global trade Law Anthea Roberts, Henrique Choer Moraes, Victor A. Ferguson and Darren J. Lim; 18. Trade, climate change and sustainable development Daniel C. Esty and Elena Cima; 19. Health and trade Timothy Meyer; 20. Security exceptions (including cybersecurity) Tania Voon and Mira Burri; 21. Digital trade Mira Burri; 22. Conceptualizing 'data' and 'artificial intelligence' in world trade law Thomas Streinz; 23. Integrating gender considerations in trade agreements Amrita Bahri and Nadia Hasham; 24. Labour and trade James Harrison; 25. Institutional issues Jeffrey L. Dunoff; 26. Epilogue Joel Trachtman and C. L. Lim.