International Law

In Place of Inter-State Retaliation The European Union's Rejection of WTO-style Trade Sanctions and Trade Remedies

By William Phelan
Oxford University Press December 2014

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780198712794
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Publication
December 2014
Format
Hardback , 224 pages
Jurisdiction
International ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

  • Provides a fresh and innovative explanation of the European Union as a distinctive form of international organization
  • Combines political science and legal approaches

Unlike many other trade regimes, the European Union forbids the use of inter-state retaliation to enforce its obligations, and rules out the use of common 'escape' mechanisms such as anti-dumping between the EU member states. How does the EU do without these mechanisms that appear so vital to the political viability of other international trade regimes, including the World Trade Organization? How, therefore, is the European legal order, with the European Court of Justice at its centre, able to be so much more binding and intrusive than the legal obligations of many other trade regimes?

This book puts forward a new explanation of a key part of the European Union's legal system, emphasising its break with the inter-state retaliation mechanisms and how Europe's special form of legal integration is facilitated by intra-industry trade, parliamentary forms of national government, and European welfare states.

It argues first that the EU member states have allowed the enforcement of EU obligations by domestic courts in order to avoid the problems associated with enforcing trade obligations by constant threats of trade retaliation. It argues second that the EU member states have been able to accept such a binding form of dispute settlement and treaty obligation because the policy adjustments required by the European legal order were politically acceptable. High levels of intra-industry trade reduced the severity of the economic adjustments required by the expansion of the European market, and inclusive and authoritative democratic institutions in the member states allowed policy-makers to prioritise a general interest in reliable trading relationships even when policy changes affected significant domestic lobbies. Furthermore, generous national social security arrangements protected national constituents against any adverse consequences arising from the expansion of European law and the intensification of the European market.

The European legal order should therefore be understood as a legalized dispute resolution institution well suited to an international trade and integration regime made up of highly interdependent parliamentary welfare states.

Readership: Students and scholars interested in international relations, international political economy, EU studies, EU law.

Table of Contents

Introduction
1: The Puzzle
2: The European Legal Order
3: Enforcement and Escape in International Trade Politics
4: Explaining the EU's Rejection of Inter-State Trade Sanctions and Trade Remedies: Analysis
5: Explaining the EU's Rejection of Inter-State Trade Sanctions and Trade Remedies: Narrative
Conclusion

About the Author

William Phelan is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Trinity College Dublin where he teaches international relations theory and the politics of international law. He received his Ph.D. at Harvard University in 2007.

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