China's Influence on Non-Trade Concerns in International Economic Law: Global Law and Sustainable Development
Editat de Paolo Farah, Elena Cimaen Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 oct 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781409448488
ISBN-10: 1409448487
Pagini: 584
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Greutate: 1.13 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Global Law and Sustainable Development
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1409448487
Pagini: 584
Dimensiuni: 174 x 246 mm
Greutate: 1.13 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria Global Law and Sustainable Development
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom
Cuprins
Forewords by: Professor Gianmaria Ajani, H. E. the Minister Gian Luca Galletti, Professor Gabrielle Marceau, H. E. the Minister Maurizio Martina
1. Introduction and Overview of the Book - Paolo Davide Farah
2. The Development of Global Justice and Sustainable Development Principles in the WTO
Multilateral Trading System through the Lens of Non-Trade Concerns: An Appraisal on China’s Progress - Paolo Davide Farah
Part I: Public Policy, International Trade & Foreign Direct Investment: The Role of States & Non State Actors in Economic Globalization
3. Economic Globalization and Social Rights: the Role of the International Labor Organization and the WTO - Claudio Di Turi
4. Multinational Corporations and Corporate Social Responsibility in a Chinese Context: An International Law Perspective - Angelica Bonfanti
5. Rights Interest Litigation, Socio-Economic Rights and Chinese Labor Law Reform - Leïla Choukroune
6. Law, Culture, and the Politics of Chinese Outward Foreign Investment - Valentina Sara Vadi
7. Chinese Investment in Africa: Strengthening the Balance Sheet - Mark Klaver and Michael Trebilcock
Part II: Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection and Climate Change
8. Soft, Complex and Fragmented International Climate Change Practice: What Implications for International Trade Law? - Francesco Sindico, Julie Gibson
9. The Principle of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in the International Regime of Climate Change - Imad Ibrahim, Thomas Deleuil, Paolo Davide Farah
10. The Kyoto Protocol: Carbon Pricing and Trade Prospects. The Clean Development Mechanism from the Perspective of the Developing Countries - Marion Lemoine
11. The Role of Domestic Policies in Fostering Technology Transfer: Evidence from China - Elena Cima
12. China's Environmental Legislation and Its Trend Towards Scientific Development - He Weidong
13. Research on the Reform of the Judicial Relief System for Environmental Disputes in China - Luo Li
14. The Impact of the Kyoto Protocol and UNFCCC on Chinese Law and the Consequential Reforms to Fight Climate Change - Carla Peng
15. The Development of NGOs in China: A Case Study on Their Involvement with Climate Change - Zhixiong Huang
16. A Comparison Between Shale Gas in China and Unconventional Fuel Development in the United States: Health, Water and Environmental Risks - Paolo Farah, Riccardo Tremolada
Part III: Fundamental Rights and Cultural Diversity
17. Understanding Non-Trade Concerns through Comparative Chinese and European Philosophy of Law - Jean Yves Heurtebise
18. The Right to Food in International Law and WTO Law: An Appraisal - Flavia Zorzi Giustiniani
19. The Right to Food in China: Cultural Foundation, Present and Future - Ning Libiao
20. Projections of China’s Food Security to 2030: Obligations as an Agricultural Superpower - James R. Simpson
21. China and the Recognition and Protection of the Human Right to Water - Roberto Soprano
22. China Meets Hollywood at WTO: Janus’ Faces of Freedom. Standards of Right and Wrong between National and International Moralities - Christophe Germann
23. Cultural Products and the WTO: China's Domestic Censorship and Media Control Policies - Rogier Creemers
24. Trade in Audiovisuals – The Case of China - Anselm Kamperman Sanders
25. Rise and Demise of US Social Media in China. A Touchstone of WTO and BIT Regulations - Danny Friedmann
26. Can Trade Restrictions Be Justified by Moral Values? Revisiting The Seals Disputes Through a Law and Economics Analysis - Julien Chaisse & Xinjie Luan
Part IV: Public Health, Product and Food Safety, Consumers Protection
27. Health Protection Measures as Barriers to EU Exports to China in the Framework of the WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures - Denise Prévost
28. SPS, Public Health and Environmental Provisions in East Asia RTAs: ASEAN and China - Lorenzo Di Masi
29. Product Safety in the Framework of the WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade - Lukasz Gruszczynski, Tivadar Otvoes, Paolo Davide Farah
30. Non-Trade Concerns and Consumer Protection in China: Surrounding Issues - Piercarlo Rossi
31. Legal Protection of Consumers in Developing Countries: An Asian Perspective - A. Rajendra Prasad
32. From Remedy of Damage to Risk Prevention. An Analysis of the New Legislative Implications of the Chapter on "Product Liability" in China’s Tort Liability Law from the Perspective of Consumer Protection - Hu Junhong
33. Tort Liability for the Compensation of Damages Caused by Dangerous Substances in China - Nadia Coggiola
34. The Protection of Biotechnological Innovation by Patent in the United States, Europe, France, and China. A Comparative Study from the Perspective of the TRIPs Agreement - Shujie Feng, Xin Shu & Ningning Zhang
35. Public Health, Intellectual Property Rights, and Developing Countries’ Access to Medicines - Jayashree Watal
36. The Relationship between the TRIPs Agreement and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD): Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folk Protection from a Chinese Perspective - Jianqiang Nie
37. Grasping Knowledge in Emerging Markets: is this the case of Western Pharmaceutical Companies in China? - Francesca Spigarelli, Andrea Filippetti
Index
1. Introduction and Overview of the Book - Paolo Davide Farah
2. The Development of Global Justice and Sustainable Development Principles in the WTO
Multilateral Trading System through the Lens of Non-Trade Concerns: An Appraisal on China’s Progress - Paolo Davide Farah
Part I: Public Policy, International Trade & Foreign Direct Investment: The Role of States & Non State Actors in Economic Globalization
3. Economic Globalization and Social Rights: the Role of the International Labor Organization and the WTO - Claudio Di Turi
4. Multinational Corporations and Corporate Social Responsibility in a Chinese Context: An International Law Perspective - Angelica Bonfanti
5. Rights Interest Litigation, Socio-Economic Rights and Chinese Labor Law Reform - Leïla Choukroune
6. Law, Culture, and the Politics of Chinese Outward Foreign Investment - Valentina Sara Vadi
7. Chinese Investment in Africa: Strengthening the Balance Sheet - Mark Klaver and Michael Trebilcock
Part II: Sustainable Development, Environmental Protection and Climate Change
8. Soft, Complex and Fragmented International Climate Change Practice: What Implications for International Trade Law? - Francesco Sindico, Julie Gibson
9. The Principle of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in the International Regime of Climate Change - Imad Ibrahim, Thomas Deleuil, Paolo Davide Farah
10. The Kyoto Protocol: Carbon Pricing and Trade Prospects. The Clean Development Mechanism from the Perspective of the Developing Countries - Marion Lemoine
11. The Role of Domestic Policies in Fostering Technology Transfer: Evidence from China - Elena Cima
12. China's Environmental Legislation and Its Trend Towards Scientific Development - He Weidong
13. Research on the Reform of the Judicial Relief System for Environmental Disputes in China - Luo Li
14. The Impact of the Kyoto Protocol and UNFCCC on Chinese Law and the Consequential Reforms to Fight Climate Change - Carla Peng
15. The Development of NGOs in China: A Case Study on Their Involvement with Climate Change - Zhixiong Huang
16. A Comparison Between Shale Gas in China and Unconventional Fuel Development in the United States: Health, Water and Environmental Risks - Paolo Farah, Riccardo Tremolada
Part III: Fundamental Rights and Cultural Diversity
17. Understanding Non-Trade Concerns through Comparative Chinese and European Philosophy of Law - Jean Yves Heurtebise
18. The Right to Food in International Law and WTO Law: An Appraisal - Flavia Zorzi Giustiniani
19. The Right to Food in China: Cultural Foundation, Present and Future - Ning Libiao
20. Projections of China’s Food Security to 2030: Obligations as an Agricultural Superpower - James R. Simpson
21. China and the Recognition and Protection of the Human Right to Water - Roberto Soprano
22. China Meets Hollywood at WTO: Janus’ Faces of Freedom. Standards of Right and Wrong between National and International Moralities - Christophe Germann
23. Cultural Products and the WTO: China's Domestic Censorship and Media Control Policies - Rogier Creemers
24. Trade in Audiovisuals – The Case of China - Anselm Kamperman Sanders
25. Rise and Demise of US Social Media in China. A Touchstone of WTO and BIT Regulations - Danny Friedmann
26. Can Trade Restrictions Be Justified by Moral Values? Revisiting The Seals Disputes Through a Law and Economics Analysis - Julien Chaisse & Xinjie Luan
Part IV: Public Health, Product and Food Safety, Consumers Protection
27. Health Protection Measures as Barriers to EU Exports to China in the Framework of the WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures - Denise Prévost
28. SPS, Public Health and Environmental Provisions in East Asia RTAs: ASEAN and China - Lorenzo Di Masi
29. Product Safety in the Framework of the WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade - Lukasz Gruszczynski, Tivadar Otvoes, Paolo Davide Farah
30. Non-Trade Concerns and Consumer Protection in China: Surrounding Issues - Piercarlo Rossi
31. Legal Protection of Consumers in Developing Countries: An Asian Perspective - A. Rajendra Prasad
32. From Remedy of Damage to Risk Prevention. An Analysis of the New Legislative Implications of the Chapter on "Product Liability" in China’s Tort Liability Law from the Perspective of Consumer Protection - Hu Junhong
33. Tort Liability for the Compensation of Damages Caused by Dangerous Substances in China - Nadia Coggiola
34. The Protection of Biotechnological Innovation by Patent in the United States, Europe, France, and China. A Comparative Study from the Perspective of the TRIPs Agreement - Shujie Feng, Xin Shu & Ningning Zhang
35. Public Health, Intellectual Property Rights, and Developing Countries’ Access to Medicines - Jayashree Watal
36. The Relationship between the TRIPs Agreement and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD): Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folk Protection from a Chinese Perspective - Jianqiang Nie
37. Grasping Knowledge in Emerging Markets: is this the case of Western Pharmaceutical Companies in China? - Francesca Spigarelli, Andrea Filippetti
Index
Notă biografică
Paolo Davide Farah teaches climate change, trade, energy, and environmental law and policy at West Virginia University, USA. He has variously taught classes on public international law, international economic law and WTO law, European law, Comparative law, and Chinese law in Italy, United Kingdom, USA, China, and other countries. He was a Visiting Scholar for the academic year 2011–2012 at Harvard Law School, East Asian Legal Studies Program and a Senior Fellow at the Institute of International Economic Law (IIEL), Georgetown University Law Center, Washington DC, USA. He is Director of Research of gLAWcal – Global Law Initiatives for Sustainable Development (www.glawcal.org.uk) and is Principal Investigator for EU Commission research projects in collaboration with European, Chinese, Russian, and Japanese universities. He is an expert in the interaction between trade, economic globalization, and NTCs, such as sustainable development, energy, environment, and human rights, with a special focus on China and other Asian countries. He has previously worked as an intern at the Legal Affairs Division of the World Trade Organization in Geneva and was an Associate Lawyer of Baker and McKenzie Law Firm, Milan, Italy. He graduated with a Maitrise in International and European Law from Paris Ouest La Defense Nanterre University (France), LLM in European Legal Studies from the College of Europe in Bruges (Belgium), and a Dual PhD in international law from Aix-Marseille University (France) and University of Milan (Italy).
Elena Cima, PhD candidate in international law at the Graduate Institute of International Law and Development Studies in Geneva, where she also works for the LLM Program in International Law. Her research interests include public international law, international trade law, international environmental law, energy law, and Chinese law. She is a member of the American branch of the International Law Association (ILA), for which she served as reporter. Her publications have focused on international trade law, energy law, and Chinese law and policy. She holds an LLB, honored summa cum laude, from the University of Milan and an LLM degree from Yale Law School.
Recenzii
‘A timely, innovative and insightful book that addresses a wide range of vitally important contemporary concerns of global reach ranging from climate change to food security to China’s role in Africa through the lens of non-trade issues. The editors and contributors are to be congratulated for cutting edge scholarship with real world significance.’
Randy Peerenboom, La Trobe University Melbourne, Australia
‘China’s growing role in the WTO, both because of its involvement in numerous disputes and as a full participant to its overall activities, and China’s active engagement in multilateral and regional law making concerning environmental, social and economic matters generally makes this volume quite timely. The contributors cover a wide spectrum of issues making this publication an indispensable tool for all those concerned in current problems of the global economy.’
Giorgio Sacerdoti, Bocconi University, Italy, and former Chairman of the WTO Appellate Body
‘China’s Influence on Non-Trade Concerns in International Economic Law, edited by Paolo Davide Farah and Elena Cima, is a most timely book on an important issue. This book is impressive both because of the breadth and depth of the topics addressed. For anyone interested in the future of the multilateral trading system, this book will be a very interesting and at times provocative read.’
Peter Van den Bossche, World Trade Institute (WTI), Switzerland and Member, Appellate Body, World Trade Organization
‘This is really a "masterwork" which has appeared at the "right time" on the "right topic". The book assesses China’s development on non-trade concerns within the context of the WTO by use of global justice and sustainable development principles. It is a great collection which critically examines China from multiple perspectives.’
Minyou Yu, Wuhan University, China
Randy Peerenboom, La Trobe University Melbourne, Australia
‘China’s growing role in the WTO, both because of its involvement in numerous disputes and as a full participant to its overall activities, and China’s active engagement in multilateral and regional law making concerning environmental, social and economic matters generally makes this volume quite timely. The contributors cover a wide spectrum of issues making this publication an indispensable tool for all those concerned in current problems of the global economy.’
Giorgio Sacerdoti, Bocconi University, Italy, and former Chairman of the WTO Appellate Body
‘China’s Influence on Non-Trade Concerns in International Economic Law, edited by Paolo Davide Farah and Elena Cima, is a most timely book on an important issue. This book is impressive both because of the breadth and depth of the topics addressed. For anyone interested in the future of the multilateral trading system, this book will be a very interesting and at times provocative read.’
Peter Van den Bossche, World Trade Institute (WTI), Switzerland and Member, Appellate Body, World Trade Organization
‘This is really a "masterwork" which has appeared at the "right time" on the "right topic". The book assesses China’s development on non-trade concerns within the context of the WTO by use of global justice and sustainable development principles. It is a great collection which critically examines China from multiple perspectives.’
Minyou Yu, Wuhan University, China
Descriere
Developing countries and industrialized countries have different priorities in relation to Non Trade Concerns (NTCs). A key challenge therefore is how to balance developed countries' right to seek the levels of protection of societal values that they deem appropriate, while minimising the negative trade effect of this for their developing trading partners. Amongst the new emerging economies, China is already playing a key role in this area. This volume assesses, taking into consideration its special context, China's behaviour internally and externally to understand its role and influence in shaping NTCs in the context of International Economic Law.