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The Social Foundations of World Trade
Norms, Community, and Constitution
Sungjoon Cho critiques the conventional contract model of the WTO and proposes an alternative notion of 'community'.
Sungjoon Cho (Author)
9781108441933, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 21 September 2017
264 pages
23 x 15.4 x 1.4 cm, 0.4 kg
'Professor Cho's book is provocative and learned. The citations are extensive and demonstrate his mastery of a variety of complex literatures, from international relations theory, to law-and-economics, to the philosophy and sociology of law.' Jason Webb Yackee, The Journal of World Investment & Trade
As highlighted by Pascal Lamy, the former head of the WTO, world trade traditionally involves state-to-state contracts and is based on an anachronistic 'monolocation' production/trade model. It therefore struggles to handle new patterns of trade such as global value chains, which are based on a 'multilocation' model. Although it continues to provide world trade on a general level with a powerful heuristic, the traditional 'rationalist' approach inevitably leaves certain descriptive and normative blind spots. Descriptively, it fails to explain important ideational factors, such as culture and norms, which can effectively guide the behaviour of trading nations with or without material factors such as interests and utilities. Normatively, the innate positivism of the traditional model makes it oblivious to the moral imperatives of the current world trading system, such as development. This book emphatically redresses these blind spots by reconstructing the WTO as a world trade community from a social perspective.
1. Introduction: reconstructing the world trading system
2. Two frameworks on an international organization
3. The world trade community
4. Norms and discourse: the internal operation of the world trade community
5. The world trade constitution: external relationships of the world trade community
6. Evaluation: the legitimacy of the world trade community
7. Conclusion: building the world trade community.
Subject Areas: International economic & trade law [LBBM], Law [L], Economics [KC], International relations [JPS]
