Trade law Part 58

Trade law Part 58

 

610

International Implications: The Elephant in the Living Room in Public Citizen v. Department of Transportation
Katharine G. Shirey
Environmental Law
Volume 34, Number 3, Summer 2004 p.961

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

In this Chapter, Ms. Shirey examines the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Public Citizen v. Department of Transportation. That case lies at the intersection of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA). The parties and the Ninth Circuit nonetheless chose to couch the issues in purely domestic terms. As the globalization of trade and capital continues to increase the interdependence of the United States and other nations of the world, cases involving the clash between the United States’s international trade obligations and the protection of the domestic environment will become more common. After examining the international law, foreign relations, and separation of powers issues implicated in Public Citizen, this Chapter concludes that Congress should use its foreign commerce power to expressly address the domestic environmental consequences of international obligations taken on by the United States.

611

Reflections on U.S. International trade law and Practice – Compatibility with the WTO Rules and Call for Modification
Y.S. Lee
Currents: International trade law Journal
Volume 12, Number 2, Winter 2003 p.31

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612

Trade mark tangles: Recent twists and turns in EC trade mark law
Peter Turner-Kerr
European Law Review
Volume 29, Number 3, June 2004 p.345-365

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613

Globalization of Trade law -The Example of the Argentina-Poultry Case
Guiguo Wang
Journal of World Investment & Trade
Volume 5, Number 3, June 2004 p.449

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614

The Cotonou Trade Régime and WTO Law
Abou Abass
European Law Journal
Volume 10, Issue 4, July 2004 p.439-462

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615

Recent Evolutions in the Fight against Corruption in International Trade Law
Nicoletta PARISI, Dino RINOLDI
International Business Law Journal
Number 3, 2004 p.345

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616

Andreas F. Lowenfeld, International Economic Law, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2002, ISBN 0198256671, 820 pp., £80.00 M. Matsushita, T. J. Schoenbaum, and P. C. Mavroidis, The World Trade Organization: Law, Practice, and Policy, Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2003, ISBN 0198764723, 770 pp., £110.00
Tomer Broude
Leiden Journal of International Law
Volume 17, Number 2, June 2004 p.430-437

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617

Matsushita: Schoenbaum and Mavroidis: The World Trade Organization: Law, Practice, and Policy
Bongi D. D. Radipati
Modern Law Review
Volume 67, Number 3, May 2004 p.531-533

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618

The Emerging Circuit Split over Secondary Meaning in Trade Dress Law
Ingrida Karins Berzins
University of Pennsylvania Law Review
Volume 152, Number 5, May 2004 p.1661

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619

Enhancing the Legitimacy of the World Trade Organization: Why the United States and the European Union Should Support the Advisory Centre on WTO Law
Andrea Greisberger
Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law
Volume 37, Number 3, May 2004 p.827

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

620

A Tale of Two Countries: A Comparison of the International commercial arbitration Laws of Egypt and Ireland
Max Barrett
Hibernian Law Journal
Volume 1, Number 1, Spring 2000 p.23

LAW JOURNAL / LAW REVIEW

1922 was a bad year for the British Empire. In February, the Protectorate of Egypt had to be recognized by the Government of Lloyd George as a sovereign independent state. In December of the same year Ireland quit the United Kingdom and assumed its independence. This was not the last time that Egypt and Ireland were to part company from the British. In the 1990s both Egypt and Ireland adopted International commercial arbitration laws based on the model law of commercial arbitration adopted on 21 June 1985 by the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law. Around the same time the British parliament drafted and adopted a unique International Commercial Arbitration law that enjoys a kinship with, but is not exactly modeled upon the Model Law. It remains to be seen whether this new law will continue to be successful in attracting major international arbitrations to London, which in the past has been the site of many international commercial arbitrations. One commentator has suggested that there is a degree of confusion abroad regarding the new British Scheme of International Commercial Arbitration .

 

Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

International Commercial Arbitration, International commercial arbitration, International trade law, Trade law.


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