Book contents
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Secondary Sanctions
- Part II Secondary Sanctions and General Public International Law
- Part III Secondary Sanctions and International Economic Law
- 11 Secondary Economic Sanctions
- 12 Secondary Sanctions under International Investment Law
- 13 The Enforcement of Extraterritorial Sanctions
- 14 Secondary Sanctions under General and Security Exceptions
- Part IV Secondary Sanctions in Commercial Practices and Domestic Litigation
- Part V The Future of Secondary Sanctions
- Index
11 - Secondary Economic Sanctions
What Role for the WTO?
from Part III - Secondary Sanctions and International Economic Law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 December 2024
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- The Cambridge Handbook of Secondary Sanctions and International Law
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Contributors
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Secondary Sanctions
- Part II Secondary Sanctions and General Public International Law
- Part III Secondary Sanctions and International Economic Law
- 11 Secondary Economic Sanctions
- 12 Secondary Sanctions under International Investment Law
- 13 The Enforcement of Extraterritorial Sanctions
- 14 Secondary Sanctions under General and Security Exceptions
- Part IV Secondary Sanctions in Commercial Practices and Domestic Litigation
- Part V The Future of Secondary Sanctions
- Index
Summary
The World Trade Organization (WTO) regime has a significant role to play in disciplining secondary sanctions. It provides substantial standards and procedures that differ from and supplement applicable standards and potential remedies under general public international law. The WTO system may address the specifics of secondary sanctions in different ways. In this chapter three perspectives are discussed in this regard. First, it is observed that non-discrimination standards in trade law may capture what appears to be unfair about secondary sanctions, as such standards would fail to detect discrimination, where all WTO Members – target Members and third Members – would be sanctioned alike. Second, however, WTO exception clauses can take into consideration that secondary sanctions are significantly more distant in terms of a connection between the measure and a legitimate policy objective as required under standards of good faith. Third and relating to fairness, WTO dispute settlement would open an opportunity for affected Members to seek a rebalancing of rights and obligations even in cases where a measure would be considered to conform to WTO rules.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024