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The last sixty years witnessed an unprecedented expansion of
international trade. The system created by the General Agreement on
Tariffs and Trade and later by the World Trade Organization (WTO)
has proved to be an efficient instrument for the elimination of
trade and tariff barriers. This process coincided with increased
national regulatory controls, which were particularly visible in
the area of risk regulation. Governments, responding to the demands
of their domestic constituencies, have adopted a wide range of
regulatory measures aimed at protecting the environment and human
health. Although, for the most part, the new regulatory initiatives
served legitimate objectives, it has also turned out that internal
measures might become an attractive vehicle for protectionism,
taking the place that was traditionally occupied by tariff
barriers. Regulating Health andEnvironmental Risks under the WTO
Law examinesthe WTO Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and
Phytosanitary Measures (SPS Agreement). In which it is an attempt
by the international community to limit possible abuses while
assuring WTO Members of an extensive margin of regulatory
discretion.
The central problem that the book tackles is whether the system
established by the SPS Agreement can address the existing and
potential challenges of a new interdependent world. In answering
this question, the author provides a comprehensive and critical
examination of the substantive provisions of the Agreement and
corresponding case law. In this context, the book particularly
focuses on two issues: the consistency in the interpretation of the
SPS Agreement and the appropriateness of its various requirements.
This analysis leads the author to conclude that despite some
interpretative failures of SPS case law, the system established by
the SPS Agreement seems to provide an effective solution for the
supervision of domestic SPS measures.
Multilateralism has served as a foundation for international
cooperation over the past several decades. Championed after the
Second World War by the United States and Western Europe, it
expanded into a broader global system of governance with the end of
the Cold War. Lately, an increasing number of States appear to be
disappointed with the existing multilateral arrangements, both at
the level of norms and that of institutions. The great powers see
unilateral and bilateral strategies, which maximize their political
leverage rather than diluting it in multilateral fora, as more
effective ways for controlling the course of international affairs.
The signs of the crisis have been visible for some time - but
recent crises indicate an acceleration of the on-going
disintegration of the multilateral system, such as Brexit, growing
resistance on the part of States to international monitoring of
compliance and the radical change in the US foreign policy during
the presidency of Donald Trump which saw the US withdraw from
several multilateral agreements (e.g. the Iran Nuclear Deal and the
Paris Agreement), leave some international organizations or bodies
(e.g. the United Nations Human Rights Council or the World Health
Organization) or paralyze some others (e.g. the World Trade
Organization (WTO)). Tackling the debate surrounding the crisis of
multilateralism and the related transformation of the underlying
international legal order, The Crisis of Multilateral Legal Order
analyzes selected aspects of the current crisis from the
perspective of public international law to identify the nature of
the crisis, its dynamics, and implications.
'The 20th century has been described as the century where
governments allowed cigarettes to kill more than 100 million people
(i.e. more than the first and second World Wars and the holocaust
together). This excellent book is a timely study of the complex,
regulatory challenges of e-cigarettes. The review of the scientific
evidence relating to electronic cigarettes in Part I - and of
international and European regulatory approaches in Part II - of
this interdisciplinary, comparative study demonstrates the need for
multilevel health governance with due regard to international human
rights law, world trade law and health law. European health and
risk regulations aim at respecting EU fundamental rights, EU
constitutional law principles (e.g. precautionary, subsidiarity and
proportionality principles) and legitimate ''constitutional
pluralism'' in multilevel health governance. The case-studies of
American and Chinese regulations of e-cigarettes in Part III of
this book illustrate that ''Chinese state-capitalism'' (e.g. its
denial of human rights and constitutional protection of citizens)
and Anglo-American neo-liberalism (e.g. its frequent neglect of
economic and social rights and international public goods) offer
less comprehensive protection of citizen interests, as also
confirmed by the current 'US-China trade wars'. Professor
Gruszczynski's innovative book succeeds in demonstrating the
complexity of ''ordo-liberal'' trade and health regulations of
''market failures'' and ''governance failures'' reconciling civil,
political, economic, social and cultural rights and health risks.'
- Ernst-Ulrich Petersmann, European University Institute, Italy
Combining the insights of leading legal scholars and public health
experts, this timely book provides up-to-date analysis of the
various legal problems emerging at different levels of governance
(international, European and national) in the context of the
regulation of e-cigarettes. Expert contributors investigate the
possible application of the precautionary and harm reduction
principles in this area, examining the legal constraints imposed on
states by international and European rules, as well as the
regulatory approaches currently in place in selected national
jurisdictions. This ground-breaking book offers an
interdisciplinary approach to the topic, combining insights from
medical, public health and legal perspectives. The Regulation of
E-cigarettes will be essential reading for both legal and public
health scholars and students. Providing a comprehensive and
in-depth assessment of the regulatory solutions applied to
e-cigarettes, it will also be a key resource for governmental
officials, NGO's and public health advocates.
The 1995 WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS)
is concerned with trade and food safety regulation, and with the
regulation of pests and diseases in agriculture. It establishes
legal standards while affirming the right of each member to choose
its own level of SPS protection. However, the question of whether
the balance has been properly struck remains a matter of ongoing
debate. The Commentary provides a detailed update of the first
edition authored by Joanne Scott in 2007. It reflects 15 years of
change in SPS case law and practice. It critically examines current
issues such as use of experts in the dispute settlement process,
applicable standard of review, or legal treatment of private
standards in food safety. Moreover, the Commentary assesses the
suitability of the current regime to address the existing needs of
developing countries The commentary also examines how science-based
criteria and the traditional GATT standards (non-discrimination and
least-trade-restrictive means) are used to discipline national SPS
measures. It explores the transparency obligations and procedural
rules that govern control, inspection, and approval processes in
importing countries. A separate section is dedicated to the
operation of the SPS Committee as an arena for transnational
governance in the SPS field. The book also investigates the
agreement's attempt to establish a framework to draw together the
diverse institutions and regulatory regimes already populating the
food safety arena. Two new chapters are also included: one
reviewing Article 5.7 SPS in greater detail, and one dealing with
the SPS rules in selected regional trade agreements (the CETA,
EU-Japan EPA, USMCA, RCEP, and CPTPP).
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