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Belt, Road and (Legal) Suspenders: Entangled Legalities on the 'New Silk Road
In: Forthcoming, Nico Krisch (ed.), Entangled Legalities
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Working paper
Social In/Equality and International Trade Reformisms of Fear
In: U. Ill. L. Rev. Online 77 (2019)
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Mapping the Potential Interactions between UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage Regime and World Trade Law
In: International journal of cultural property, Band 25, Heft 4, S. 419-448
ISSN: 1465-7317
Abstract:The 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of Intangible Cultural Heritage (CSICH) was not intended to have legal repercussions in international trade. Nevertheless, intangible cultural heritage (ICH) may interact with trade regulation under various scenarios. The CSICH "Representative List" inscribes numerous ICH elements with real and potential international commercial aspects and consequent trade law implications. These emergent trade law–ICH regime dynamics require not only some critical reflection (for example, is safeguarding of ICH ultimately dependent on commodification or, at least in some cases, significantly prone to commercial capture?) but also doctrinal legal analysis. This article undertakes a survey of many plausible ICH–trade interactions (generally excluding intellectual property issues), providing an analytical framework with reference to a series of case sketches of selected CSICH inscriptions such as kimjang, beer culture in Belgium, and yoga. These and other cases may indeed raise issues under world trade law, including the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, the General Agreement on Trade in Services, the Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade, the Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures, and subsidies regulation. Trade law may have underestimated the significance of ICH as a growing field. At the same time, ICH law may be developing without thinking through how it is impacted by commercial interests and international trade law.
Complexity Rules (or: Ruling Complexity), a Response to Jutta Brunnée
In: Hebrew University of Jerusalem International Law Forum Working Series 08-17
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Working paper
A Field of his Own: John Jackson and the Consolidation of International Economic Law as a Scholarly Domain
In: Journal of international economic law, Band 19, Heft 2, S. 329-331
ISSN: 1464-3758
A Field of His Own: John Jackson and the Consolidation of International Economic Law as a Scholarly Domain
In: Journal of International Economic Law, (2016), 0, 1-3
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על המישפוט של תרבות האוכל הגלובאלית: היש למשפט הבינלאומי תפקיד בהגנה על ?מסורות קולינאריות ובקידומן (The Legalization of Global Food Culture: Can International Law Play a Role in the Protection and Promotion of Culinary Traditions?)
In: Law and Food (Aeyal Gross and Yofi Tirosh, eds., 2016), in the series "Law, Society and Culture", edited by Menachem Mautner
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Selective Subsidiarity and Dialectic Deference in the World Trade Organization
In: Law and Contemporary Problems (2016 Forthcoming)
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From Chianti to Kimchi: Geographical Indications, Intangible Cultural Heritage, and Their Unsettled Relationship with Cultural Diversity
In: In Irene Calboli & Ng-Loy Wee Loon (eds.), Geographical Indications at the Crossroads of Trade, Development, and Culture: Perspectives from Asia Pacific (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016 Forthcoming)
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A Crafty Madness Kept Aloof: Anti-Dumping as Faulted Global Governance
In: "Grey Zones of Global Governance and Trade: Anti-Dumping, Subsidies, Human Rights and Policy Spaces" Daniel Drache and Les Jacobs, eds. (2015)
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Behavioral International Law
In: 163 University of Pennsylvania Law Review (2015 Forthcoming)
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Warming to Crisis: The Climate Change Law of Unintended Opportunity
In: 2013 Netherlands Yearbook of International Law
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Keep Calm and Carry On: Martti Koskenniemi and the Fragmentation of International Law
In: ILF Research Paper No. 10-13
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