The Power to Protect: Trade, Health and Uncertainty in the WTO
By (Author) Catherine Button
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Hart Publishing
6th December 2004
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Public international law: environment
341.754
Hardback
296
Width 156mm, Height 234mm, Spine 23mm
This book examines the intersection of WTO trade liberalisation rules and domestic health protection, a subject that is of considerable interest to those concerned that the WTO impinges on national regulatory autonomy. In analysing the tension between health protection and trade liberalisation, the book focuses on the way in which this tension is (or is not) resolved through the dispute resolution process. It offers a detailed analysis of the relevant WTO rules and case law, identyfying particular concerns relating to the ability of WTO Members to take protective action in circumstances of scientific uncertainty and the role of social and cultural factors in the making of health-related regulations. The nature of scientific evidence and the extent to which the scientific process internalises uncertainty is further explored, drawing on documentation relating to the theory and conduct of scientific risk assessment. Despite the popularity of the precautionary principle in some quarters, it is suggested that it may not be advisable for the WTO to adopt that principle. Rather, further attention should be paid to the role that the standard of review might play in easing the tensions that arise when a sovereign state's health regulations are reviewed by the WTO. The origins of the WTO's 'objective assessment' standard of review are explained, but the standard itself is criticised. Options for developing the standard of review are considered, with a 'reasonable regulator' standard based on the Asbestos case proposed. The book takes a comparative approach, drawing on ECJ cases reviewing Member State and Community health measures as well as US judicial review and commerce clause cases.
a thoughtful, lucidly written and interesting account of a very important and difficult issue. -- Michael Lennard * Australian Year Book of International Law, Vol 25 *
Catherine Button was educated at the Universities of Melbourne and Oxford,and now practises law at Minter Ellison's Melbourne office, specialising in dispute settlement.