926 resultados para Anthropology, Cultural|Political Science, General
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This paper addresses a number of policy challenges arising from ongoing attempts to negotiate a plurilateral Trade in Services Agreement (TISA), a recently launched plurilateral negotiating initiative coexisting uneasily alongside the World Trade Organisation’s General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), particularly in the context of the ongoing Doha Development Agenda. While the TISA offers scope for imparting much needed forward movement to a policy area of central economy-wide and trade importance, such progress, even if realized within the narrower confines of a preferential trade agreement made possible under the GATS, poses a number of systemic risks to the multilateral order extending beyond services trade.
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This paper explores a number of procedural and substantive considerations arising from ongoing attempts to craft a plurilateral Trade in Services Agreement (TISA) among the so-called “Really Good Friends of Services” coalition of WTO Members. The paper suggests that considerable scope exists to move forward a multilateral negotiating agenda on services that both the digital revolution and a continued surge of preferential rule-making has rendered increasingly obsolete. As the most significant attempt to date to craft a GATS Article V-compatible PTA in services, TISA offers considerable promise. The paper, however, cautions that the case for embedding TISA into the architecture of WTO rules alongside the General Agreement on Trade in Services or in its place is weak on both procedural and substantive grounds to the extent that the ongoing talks take place behind doors that remain closed even to the WTO Secretariat, let alone to many of the world’s leading developing country suppliers of services, and involve potentially significant departures from GATS rules liable to complicate any hoped for multilateral migratory journey. Key words: WTO, GATS, trade in services, plurilateral agreements, critical mass negotiations, preferential trade liberalization.
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El Acuerdo global firmado en 1997 entre la Comunidad Europea y sus Estados miembros y México, junto con el conjunto de decisiones adoptadas en este marco, ha sido eficaz y, por tanto, las modificaciones de este acuerdo se ven motivadas principalmente por el cambio del panorama mundial desde que este se promulgó por primera vez. Por ello, para las próximas negociaciones con México, es sumamente importante prestar atención a las consideraciones generales sobre cómo se configura la política comercial de la Unión Europea. En este contexto, se analizan las necesidades y expectativas, tanto de la UE como de México, con respecto a cualquier futuro acuerdo, haciendo especial hincapié en ámbitos que van más allá del comercio de bienes y servicios, tales como la contratación pública, la inversión y la cooperación regulatoria. Se defiende que, para cualquier modificación, deben tomarse como modelo los «antiguos» acuerdos de asociación, teniendo en cuenta que se centran en temas específicos de la UE y su capacidad para atender a las necesidades de México en cualquier acuerdo más avanzado que se vaya a celebrar.
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The Graduate Institute organized an academic workshop and roundtable on the occasion of EFTA's 50th Anniversary in Geneva under the chairmanship of H.E. Doris Leuthard, President of the Swiss Confederation. Pierre Sauve, Deputy Managing Director and Director of Studies, WTI and Co-leader, NCCR-Trade work programme on preferentialism and Anirudh Shingal, Senior Research Fellow, WTI and Co-leader, NCCR-Trade work programme on impact assessment of trade, co-authored a paper on the nature of preferentialism in services trade, which Anirudh presented at the workshop. The event was extremely well-attended by high profile dignitaries and academics including President Leuthard; Director General of the WTO, Pascal Lamy; trade ministers of Brazil and Finland; Jan Kubis, Executive Secretary of the UNECE and several current and former ambassadors. The academic workshop, moderated by Theresa Carpenter (Graduate Institute, Geneva), began in the morning with Prof. Victor Norman's (Norwegian School of Economics & Business Administration) presentation on the future of EFTA. Other presentations included those by Prof. Peter Egger (ETH Zurich) on the structural estimation of gravity models with market entry dynamics and by Prof. Richard Baldwin (Graduate Institute, Geneva) on 21st century regionalism. The high-profile Panel in the afternoon, moderated by Prof. Richard Baldwin, was led by President Leuthard who spoke on free trade agreements and the multilateral trading system in 2020. The keynote address at the Panel was delivered by Prof. Jagdish Bhagwati (Coulmbia University), who spoke on strengthening defences against protectionism and liberalizing trade.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Latest issue consulted: Vol. 29, pt, 19, published in 1892
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Description based on: 60th (1979).
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Editor: 1894- F. Larnaude.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Bibliographical footnotes.
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"October 1979."
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"Delivered as a course of lectures at the Royal Institution in 1882, and ... published as a series of articles in the Fortnightly review."--Advertisement.
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Contents.--v. 1. Philosophy and metaphysics.--v. 2. Aesthetics and mathematics.--v. 3. History and law.--v. 4. Law and religion.--v. 5. History of language.--v. 6. Literature and art.--v. 7. Physics and chemistry.--v. 8. Astronomy and earth sciences.--v. 9. Biology.--v. 10. Anthropology and mental science.--v. 11. Medicine.--v. 12. Medicine and technology.--v. 13. Economics and social regulation.--v. 14. Jurisprudence and social science.--v. 15. Secular and religious education.
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"These volumes have been prepared to present in more convenient form for present reference the series of articles on 'American political history,' contributed to Lalor's Cyclopædia of political science, political economy, and political history, by the late Professor Alexander Johnston."--Pref.