Seals and the Need for more Deference to Vienna by WTO Adjudicators


Autoria(s): Häberli, Christian
Data(s)

08/07/2014

Resumo

This paper asks how World Trade Organization (WTO) panels and the Appellate Body (AB) take public international law (PIL) into account when interpreting WTO rules as a part of international economic law (IEL). Splendid isolation of the latter is not new; indeed it is intended by the negotiators of the Understanding on the Settlement of Disputes (DSU). At the same time, the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties (VCLT) is quite clear when it provides the general rules and the supplementary means of treaty interpretation. Despite such mandatory guidance, WTO adjudicators (when given a choice and assuming they see the conflict) prefer deference to WTO law over deference to Vienna and take a dogmatic way out of interpretation quandaries. The AB and panels make abundant reference to Vienna, though less so to substantive PIL. Often times, however, they do so simply in order to buttress their findings of violations of WTO rules. Perhaps tellingly, however, none of the reports in EC – Seals contains even a single mention of VCLT, despite numerous references to international standards addressing indigenous rights and animal welfare. In the longer term, and absent a breakthrough on the negotiation front, this pattern of carefully eschewing international treaty law and using PIL just for the sake of convenience could have serious consequences for the credibility and acceptance of the multilateral trading system. Following the adage ‘negotiate or litigate’ recourse to WTO dispute settlement increases when governments are less ready to make treaty commitments commensurate with the challenges of globalisation. This is true even for ‘societal choice’ cases on the margins of classic trade disputes. We will argue here that it is precisely for cases such as these that VCLT and PIL should be used more systematically by panels and the AB. Failing that, instead of building bridges for more coherent international regulation, WTO adjudicators could burn those same bridges which the DSU interpretation margin leaves open for accomplishing their job which is to find a ‘positive solution’. Worse, judicial incoherence could return to WTO dispute settlement like a boomerang and damage the credibility and thus the level of acceptance of the multilateral trading system per se.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://boris.unibe.ch/63055/6/Haeberli_-_Seals.pdf

Häberli, Christian (8 July 2014). Seals and the Need for more Deference to Vienna by WTO Adjudicators (SIEL Online Proceedings Working Paper 2014/22). Society of International Economic Law

doi:10.7892/boris.63055

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Society of International Economic Law

Relação

http://boris.unibe.ch/63055/

http://www.nccr-trade.org/publication/seals-and-the-need-for-more-deference-to-vienna-by-wto-adjudicators/

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Häberli, Christian (8 July 2014). Seals and the Need for more Deference to Vienna by WTO Adjudicators (SIEL Online Proceedings Working Paper 2014/22). Society of International Economic Law

Palavras-Chave #340 Law #380 Commerce, communications & transportation
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/workingPaper

info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion

NonPeerReviewed