EU and WTO Law: How Tight is the Legal Straitjacket for Environmental Product Regulation?Marc Pallemaerts Asp / Vubpress / Upa, 2006 - 327 pages Examining the impact of free trade rules, this survey aims to help clarify the legal boundaries that exist on product regulation between national law, European Union (EU) law, World Trade Organization (WTO) law, and international environmental law. Public authorities make a consistent effort to regulate trade, acting within the policy space that remains open--both at the national and supranational level--while maintaining environmental protection and sustainable development. In exploring this process, this study brings to light the conflict of interests between free trade rules and product-oriented environmental measures. While environmental law increasingly relies on product regulations as an important policy instrument, supranational economic law--as laid down within the framework of the EU and the WTO--tends to view such regulations as trade barriers, which are to be removed as far as possible. This apparent contradiction between environmental protection and trade liberalization is analyzed closely, revealing why it has been the subject of much political and academic debate. |
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Contents
European Economic Integration Globalisation | 7 |
Challenges | 21 |
Is There Any Space Left in the EU Internal Market for National | 45 |
WTO Legal Constraints and Opportunities for National Environ | 119 |
Within the Law or Bypassing | 135 |
The Transatlantic GMO Dispute Against the European Commu | 175 |
The Regulation of | 275 |
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EU and WTO Law: How Tight is the Legal Straitjacket for Environmental ... No preview available - 2006 |