Greening the GATT: Trade, Environment, and the FutureDaniel C. Esty, Daniel C.. Esty, Director of the Yale Center for Environmental Law and Policy and Professor Daniel Esty Institute for International Economics, 1994 - 319 pages There is growing consensus that new international rules and principles are needed to reconcile conflicts, and promote complementarities, between trade and environmental goals. The issue is especially acute for very poor countries striving for rapid economic growth. Esty, a former Environmental Protection Agency official with extensive experience in trade and environmental negotiations, examines the vital connections between trade, environment and development. He argues that current international trade rules and institutions must be significantly reformed to address environmental concerns while still promoting economic growth and development. Esty offers new international rules and principles to help make trade and environmental policies work together to better achieve sustainable economic progress. He concludes with recommendations for a Global Environmental Organization (GEO) to promote simultaneous achievement of trade environmental goals. |
From inside the book
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Page 46
GATT's Existing Rules The heart of the existing trade regime is the nondiscrimination requirements of GATT Articles I and III , which obligate parties to treat imports from any GATT party no less favorably than other imports ( the ...
GATT's Existing Rules The heart of the existing trade regime is the nondiscrimination requirements of GATT Articles I and III , which obligate parties to treat imports from any GATT party no less favorably than other imports ( the ...
Page 90
To respond to the concern about the multiplicity of international organizations , it might be useful to eliminate or consolidate three or four existing groups at the time the GEO is established ( National Commission on the Environment ...
To respond to the concern about the multiplicity of international organizations , it might be useful to eliminate or consolidate three or four existing groups at the time the GEO is established ( National Commission on the Environment ...
Page 217
17 Reinterpretation of existing rules and practices by dispute panels offers another flexible method for integrating environmental concerns into the international trading system . Some analysts of the tradeenvironment linkage believe ...
17 Reinterpretation of existing rules and practices by dispute panels offers another flexible method for integrating environmental concerns into the international trading system . Some analysts of the tradeenvironment linkage believe ...
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Contents
Introduction | 1 |
Origins of the Trade and Environment Conflict | 9 |
Conflict or Convergence | 35 |
Copyright | |
13 other sections not shown
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accept actions addition advance agreed agreement applied approach appropriate argues basis become benefits chapter competitiveness concerns costs Court create decision developing countries DIEGO differences domestic economic effect efforts ensure environmental harms environmental policies environmental protection environmental regulations environmental standards environmentalists established European example existing export face fact foreign free traders fund GATT global global environmental goals harm important imposed industry Institute interests international environmental international trade ISBN paper issues limited means ment mental multilateral natural negotiations noted Organization panel particularly parties pays permit political pollution potential principle problems programs question reduce reflect regime regulations requirements response result ronmental rules Specifically structure sustainable tion trade and environment trade liberalization trade measures trade restrictions tuna unilateral United waste