WTO and Private International Law

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in SammelwerkenForschungbegutachtet

Authors

In this entry, which is part of the forthcoming Encyclopedia of Private International Law (edited by Jürgen Basedow, Franco Ferrari, Pedro de Miguel Asensio, & Giesela Rühl, Edward Elgar, forthcoming 2017), I explore correlations between domestic regimes of private international law and World Trade Organization (WTO) law. Both sectors have traditionally been viewed as separate areas. Private international law (particularly choice of law) is viewed as part of a country’s national law. It is limited largely to private-party disputes and, hence, individual interests. WTO law, by contrast, is seen as a segment of public international law, an area to be kept strictly separate from national law. Private parties are neither directly protected nor endowed with individual rights. As can be shown, this impression of isolation is incorrect, primarily because private international law is no longer limited (if it ever was) to the resolution of private-party conflicts. It is the modern ‘regulatory function’ of private international law that may conflict with a state’s obligations under public international law. This becomes a concern with respect to WTO law.
OriginalspracheEnglisch
TitelEncyclopedia of Private International Law
HerausgeberJürgen Basedow, Franco Ferrari, Giesela Rühl, Pedro de Miguel Asensio
Anzahl der Seiten11
Band2
ErscheinungsortCheltenham
VerlagEdward Elgar Publishing
Erscheinungsdatum07.2017
Seiten1844-1854
ISBN (Print)978-1-78254-722-8
ISBN (elektronisch)978-1-78254-723-5
DOIs
PublikationsstatusErschienen - 07.2017

DOI