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Law can no longer be viewed through a purely national lens.
Transnational legal ordering affects the boundary of the state and
the market, the allocation of power among national institutions,
the role of professions and their expertise, and associational
patterns that provide new normative frames. This book breaks new
ground for understanding the impacts of transnational legal
ordering within nation-states in today's globalized world. The book
addresses the different dimensions of state change at stake and the
factors that determine these impacts. It brings together leading
scholars from sociology and law who study the effects of
transnational legal ordering within different countries. Their case
studies illustrate how transnational legal ordering interacts with
national law and institutions in different regulatory areas, and
cover anti-money laundering, bankruptcy, competition, education,
intellectual property, health, and municipal water law and policy
in different countries. The book explains the extent and limits of
transnational legal ordering in today's world.
This book examines the growing interaction between private
enterprises and public officials to challenge foreign trade
barriers. Building on more than one hundred interviews with former
and current trade officials and private attorneys in the United
States and Europe, Gregory Shaffer calls attention to the ways in
which well-organized private parties are using the World Trade
Organizations legal system to advance their own commercial
ambitions, and how public officials increasingly are dependent on
their assistance. Shaffer assesses the historical, political,
legal, economic, and cultural factors that have affected the
formation of these ad hoc public-private partnerships, as well as
trends in the European Union toward U.S.-style practice. He
considers the implications of these public-private trade litigation
networks for the effectiveness and equity of the WTO system and the
stability of U.S.-E.U. relations.
The transatlantic dispute over genetically modified organisms
(GMOs) has brought into conflict the United States and the European
Union, two long-time allies and economically interdependent
democracies with a long record of successful cooperation. Yet the
dispute - pitting a largely acceptant US against an EU deeply
suspicious of GMOs - has developed into one of the most bitter and
intractable transatlantic and global conflicts, resisting efforts
at negotiated resolution and resulting in a bitterly contested
legal battle before the World Trade Organization.
Professors Pollack and Shaffer investigate the obstacles to
reconciling regulatory differences among nations through
international cooperation, through the lens of the GMO dispute. The
book addresses the dynamic interactions of domestic law and
politics, transnational networks, international regimes, and global
markets, through a theoretically grounded and empirically
comprehensive analysis of the governance of GM foods and crops.
They demonstrate that the deeply politicized, entrenched and
path-dependent nature of the regulation of GMOs in the US and the
EU has fundamentally shaped negotiations and decision-making at the
international level, limiting the prospects for deliberation and
providing incentives for both sides to engage in hard bargaining
and to "shop" for favorable international forums. They then assess
the impacts, and the limits, of international pressures on domestic
US and European law, politics and business practice, which have
remained strikingly resistant to change.
International cooperation in areas like GMO regulation, the authors
conclude, must overcome multiple obstacles, legal and political,
domestic and international. Any effective response to this
persistent dispute, they argue, must recognize both the obstacles
to successful cooperation, and the options that remain for each
side when cooperation fails.
Law can no longer be viewed through a purely national lens.
Transnational legal ordering affects the boundary of the state and
the market, the allocation of power among national institutions,
the role of professions and their expertise, and associational
patterns that provide new normative frames. This book breaks new
ground for understanding the impacts of transnational legal
ordering within nation-states in today's globalized world. The book
addresses the different dimensions of state change at stake and the
factors that determine these impacts. It brings together leading
scholars from sociology and law who study the effects of
transnational legal ordering within different countries. Their case
studies illustrate how transnational legal ordering interacts with
national law and institutions in different regulatory areas, and
cover anti-money laundering, bankruptcy, competition, education,
intellectual property, health, and municipal water law and policy
in different countries. The book explains the extent and limits of
transnational legal ordering in today's world.
The transatlantic dispute over genetically modified organisms
(GMOs) has brought into conflict the United States and the European
Union, two long-time allies and economically interdependent
democracies with a long record of successful cooperation. Yet the
dispute - pitting a largely acceptant US against an EU deeply
suspicious of GMOs - has developed into one of the most bitter and
intractable transatlantic and global conflicts, resisting efforts
at negotiated resolution and resulting in a bitterly contested
legal battle before the World Trade Organization.
Professors Pollack and Shaffer investigate the obstacles to
reconciling regulatory differences among nations through
international cooperation, through the lens of the GMO dispute. The
book addresses the dynamic interactions of domestic law and
politics, transnational networks, international regimes, and global
markets, through a theoretically grounded and empirically
comprehensive analysis of the governance of GM foods and crops.
They demonstrate that the deeply politicized, entrenched and
path-dependent nature of the regulation of GMOs in the US and the
EU has fundamentally shaped negotiations and decision-making at the
international level, limiting the prospects for deliberation and
providing incentives for both sides to engage in hard bargaining
and to "shop" for favorable international forums. They then assess
the impacts, and the limits, of international pressures on domestic
US and European law, politics and business practice, which have
remained strikingly resistant to change.
International cooperation in areas like GMO regulation, the authors
conclude, must overcome multiple obstacles, legal and political,
domestic and international. Any effective response to this
persistent dispute, they argue, must recognize both the obstacles
to successful cooperation, and the options that remain for each
side when cooperation fails.
This examination of the law in action of WTO dispute settlement
takes a developing-country perspective. Providing a bottom-up
assessment of the challenges, experiences and strategies of
individual developing countries, it assesses what these countries
have done and can do to build the capacity to deploy and shape the
WTO legal system, as well as the daunting challenges that they
face. Chapters address developing countries of varying size and
wealth, including China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Thailand, South
Africa, Egypt, Kenya and Bangladesh. Building from empirical work
by leading academics and practitioners, this book provides a much
needed understanding of how the WTO dispute settlement system
actually operates behind the scenes for developing countries.
This examination of the law in action of WTO dispute settlement
takes a developing-country perspective. Providing a bottom-up
assessment of the challenges, experiences and strategies of
individual developing countries, it assesses what these countries
have done and can do to build the capacity to deploy and shape the
WTO legal system, as well as the daunting challenges that they
face. Chapters address developing countries of varying size and
wealth, including China, India, Brazil, Argentina, Thailand, South
Africa, Egypt, Kenya and Bangladesh. Building from empirical work
by leading academics and practitioners, this book provides a much
needed understanding of how the WTO dispute settlement system
actually operates behind the scenes for developing countries.
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