WTO – Institutions and Dispute
Settlement
Edited by Rüdiger Wolfrum,
Peter-Tobias Stoll and Karen Kaiser
Two of the greatest achievements of
the Uruguay Round were the establishment of the World Trade Organization (WTO)
as – compared to the GATT – a fully-fledged international organization and the
creation of a new, uniform and binding dispute settlement system. While the
failure of the Ministerial Conferences in Seattle and Cancún revealed the first
cracks in the institutional structure of the WTO, the operation of the new
dispute settlement system has so far been a remarkable success.
In a practical and authoritative
article-by-article account, this volume covers the legislative history,
interpretation and practical application of the Agreement establishing the
World Trade Organization, Articles XXII, XXIII, and XXIV GATT 1994, the Dispute
Settlement Understanding, the Trade Review Policy Mechanism, the Understanding
in Respect of Waivers of Obligations under the GATT 1994 and the Understanding
on the Interpretation of Article XXIV GATT 1994.
Written by a team of distinguished scholars
and practitioners, the volume is an indispensable work of reference for all
those interested in the WTO institutional fundamentals and the dispute settlement
system (international lawyers, scholars and students of WTO law, diplomats and
international civil servants, members of NGOs).