International Trade Law and Domestic Policy

Canada, the United States, and the WTO

Jacqueline D Krikorian author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:University of British Columbia Press

Published:1st Jan '13

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

International Trade Law and Domestic Policy cover

A cogent rebuttal to the argument that the WTO has shifted domestic policy-making to the international realm.

An innovative assessment of the extent to which international judicial bodies influence domestic law and policy arrangements.

Critics of the World Trade Organization argue that its binding dispute settlement process imposes a neoliberal agenda on member states. If this is the case, why would any nation agree to participate?

Jacqueline Krikorian explores this question by examining the impact of the WTO’s dispute settlement mechanism on domestic policies in the United States and Canada. She demonstrates that the WTO’s ability to influence domestic arrangements has been constrained by three factors: judicial deference, institutional arrangements, and strategic decision making by political elites in Ottawa and Washington.

By bringing the insights of law and politics scholarship to bear on a subject matter traditionally addressed by international relations scholars, Krikorian shows that the classic division in political science between these two fields of study, though suitable in the postwar era, is outdated in the context of a globalized world.

Krikorian’s book is significant in that it makes an important contribution to the discipline by developing “a better understanding of the dynamic relationship between international and national legal frameworks.” Recommended. Graduate, research, and professional collections.

-- C. W. Herrick, Muhlenberg College * Choi

  • Commended for The Hill Times List of Top 100 Best Books for 2013 (Canada).

ISBN: 9780774823074

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 540g

320 pages