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E-book
Author Suttle, Oisin, 1980- author.

Title Distributive justice and world trade law : a political theory of international trade regulation / Oisin Suttle
Published Cambridge [UK] ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2017

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Description 1 online resource
Series Cambridge international trade and economic law ; 36
Cambridge international trade and economic law ; 36.
Contents Cover -- Half-title page -- Series page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Preface -- Table of Cases -- Table of Treaties, Instruments, and Official Documents -- List of Abbreviations -- Part I Foundations -- 1 Introduction -- 1.1 Distributive Justice in International Trade -- 1.2 Why Trade Law Needs a Theory of Justice â#x80;Œ -- 1.3 â#x80;Œ and Why It Doesnâ#x80;#x99;t Have One -- 1.4 Overview -- 1.5 On the Merits and Challenges of Interdisciplinarity -- 1.6 Equality in Global Commerce -- 1.6.1 Two Classes of Measure -- 1.6.2 Identifying Measures
1.6.3 Equality in Global Commerce2 Why World Trade Law Needs a Theory of Justice -- 2.1 The Problem of Distributive Justice in International Trade Regulation -- 2.2 Distributive Justice and Political Morality -- 2.3 On the Scope of Justice: Domestic vs. International vs. Global -- 2.4 What Trade Law Theory Is (and Is Not) About -- 2.5 Existing Approaches to Distributive Justice in Trade Regulation -- 2.5.1 Equality and a Global Difference Principle -- 2.5.2 Social Liberalism and the Law of Peoples -- 2.5.3 Human Rights and Realization-Focused Comparison
2.5.4 Internalism and Interpretivism2.5.5 Moral Positivism -- 2.5.6 Economic Efficiency -- 2.6 Structure and Methodology -- 2.6.1 Normative Theory -- 2.6.2 Explanation, Interpretation, Evaluation -- 2.6.3 Critical Implications -- 2.7 Conclusion -- Part II Justice -- 3 Towards a Political Theory of International Economic Law -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Coercion, Nonvoluntary Institutions, and Distributive Justice -- 3.2.1 Can Coercion Distinguish Domestic from International? -- 3.2.2 Why Does Coercion Matter?
3.3 Coercion and the Plurality of Global Institutions3.4 Direct Coercion, Indirect Coercion, and Self-Determination -- 3.5 Exclusive Coercion, Inclusive Coercion, and the Fruits of Social Cooperation -- 3.6 External Coercion and the Interpersonal Test -- 3.7 From International Coercion to Equality in Global Commerce -- 3.8 Conclusion -- 4 Sovereignty, Nationality, and the Limits of Statism -- 4.1 Introduction -- 4.2 Sovereignty, Security, and Global Justice -- 4.2.1 Sovereignty and Security -- 4.2.2 Sovereignty and Coordination
4.3 Sovereignty and the Basic Structure4.3.1 Why the Basic Structure? -- 4.3.2 The Impact Objection -- 4.3.3 The Participation Objection -- 4.3.4 The Agency Objection -- 4.4 National Priority and Global Justice -- 4.5 Further Statist Objections -- 4.5.1 The Metric Problem -- 4.5.2 The Dynamic Problem -- 4.6 Conclusion -- 5 Self-Determination and External Trade Measures -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Self-Determination in International Law -- 5.3 Intrinsic Arguments -- 5.4 Expressive Arguments -- 5.5 Instrumental Arguments
Summary This book proposes a novel theory of justice in international trade law, examining what justice means and demands in this domain
Notes Print version record
Subject World Trade Organization.
SUBJECT World Trade Organization fast
Subject Foreign trade regulation.
Distributive justice.
Foreign trade regulation -- Political aspects
Free trade.
LAW -- Military.
Distributive justice
Foreign trade regulation
Foreign trade regulation -- Political aspects
Free trade
Form Electronic book
ISBN 9781108235235
1108235239
9781108246668
1108246664