Making Offers They Can’t Refuse: Consensus and Domination in the WTO

Author:

Laoghaire Tadhg Ó1

Affiliation:

1. University of Leeds , Leeds , UK

Abstract

Abstract The World Trade Organisation (WTO), and the international trade regime within which it operates, is regularly evaluated in terms of distributive outcomes or opportunities. A less-established concern is the extent to which the institutional structure of the trade regime enables agents to exert control over the economic forces to which they’re subject. This oversight is surprising, as trade negotiations amongst states have profound impacts upon what options remain open to those states and their citizens in regulating their economies. This article contributes to filling this lacuna in the literature. Following on from recent neo-republican work on global and international justice, it argues that a major problem with the WTO is that it fails to effectively mitigate the domination of some states by others within its negotiations. Such domination prevails despite the employment of negative consensus as a decision-making procedure.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy

Reference80 articles.

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3. Bachvarova, M. (2013). ‘Non-Domination’s Role in the Theorizing of Global Justice’, Journal of Global Ethics 9 (2): 173–185.

4. Bagwell, K. and Staiger, R.W. (2004). The Economics of the World Trading System (Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press).

5. Baldwin, R.E. (2012). ‘The Case for a Multilateral Trade Organization’, in M. Daunton, A. Narlikar and R.M. Stern (eds.). The Oxford Handbook on the World Trade Organization (Oxford: Oxford University Press), pp. 29–39.

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