Yearwood, Ronnie R. F.

The interaction between World Trade Organisation (WTO) law and external international law the constrained openness of WTO law (a prologue to a theory) / [electronic resource] : Ronnie R.F. Yearwood. - Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon [England] ; New York, N.Y. : Routledge, 2012. - xxiv, 239 p. - Routledge research in international economic law .

Includes bibliographical references (p. [219]-233) and index.

1. Introduction : the fragmented nature of international law -- 2. The inadequacy of the professional tool box of treaty interpretation as an account of fragmentation -- 3. The constrained openness of WTO law -- 4. The debate on the interaction between WTO law and external international law -- 5. The precautionary principle and the WTO agreement on sanitary and phytosanitary measures -- 6. Examples of interaction between WTO law and external international law -- 7. Conclusion.

"International legal scholarship is concerned with the fragmentation of international law into specialised systems such as trade, environment and human rights. Fragmentation raises questions about the inter-systemic interaction between the various specialised systems of international law. In the discourse on WTO law, three 'propositions' 'openness', 'closure' and 'privileged' have been put forward to explain the interaction between WTO law and external law. This book engages with these debates about how international economic law interacts with other bodies of international law. Using ideas and theories from other spheres including sociology, literature and art, the book develops a new way of thinking about how WTO law interacts with external international law through the conceptual framework of 'constrained openness'. The book argues that constrained openness offers a more nuanced way to think about how WTO law interacts with external law"--




Mode of access: World Wide Web.

9780203807675


World Trade Organization.


Foreign trade regulation.
Free trade.
International economic relations.
International law.


Electronic books.