The Law and Economic Development in the Third World
By (Author) Philip E. Bondzi Simpson
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
20th April 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Law
338.9172
Hardback
200
This volume examines critical issues that all developing countries must face. Subjects covered include an historical insight into and description of the legal system of a Third World country; considerations of intellectual property regimes and suggestions for developing countries; insights into the patterns of investment on a continent the bulk of whose members are Third World countries, and suggestions for establishing and strengthening legal arrangements in order to attract beneficial investment; a critical examination of proposals made during the most recent GATT multilateral trade negotiations; and pointers to global trends in the provision of financial services. These chapters range from the historical to the contemporary, from the descriptive to the analytical and prescriptive, and from the theoretical to the empirical. In toto, the volume seeks to challenge scholars, bureaucrats, and technocrats in developing countries to criticaly and candidly examine the causes, conditions and magnitude of underdevelopment, and to propose and critique thoroughly options available to them.
P. EBOW BONDZI-SIMPSON is managing editor of Blinx Book Development Bureau. Trained as an international economic lawyer, Dr. Bondzi-Simpson is the author of Legal Relationships between Transnational Corporations and Host States (Quorum, 1990), as well as law journal materials.