Book contents
- Preferential Services LIBERALIZATION
- Cambridge International Trade and Economic Law
- Preferential Services LIBERALIZATION
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Cited Treaties and EU Legislation
- Cited Cases
- Introduction
- Part I Preferentialism in the WTO and in the GATS
- Part II Federalism and Liberalization of Services Trade
- Part III Methodology for a Legal-Empirical Analysis of EIAs
- 7 Empirical Research on Services Preferentialism
- 8 A New Methodology for the Study of EIAs
- 9 Adaption to Scheduling Differences and Economic Realities
- Part IV Analysis of the Selected Services Agreements
- Book part
- Index
8 - A New Methodology for the Study of EIAs
from Part III - Methodology for a Legal-Empirical Analysis of EIAs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2019
- Preferential Services LIBERALIZATION
- Cambridge International Trade and Economic Law
- Preferential Services LIBERALIZATION
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Tables
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Cited Treaties and EU Legislation
- Cited Cases
- Introduction
- Part I Preferentialism in the WTO and in the GATS
- Part II Federalism and Liberalization of Services Trade
- Part III Methodology for a Legal-Empirical Analysis of EIAs
- 7 Empirical Research on Services Preferentialism
- 8 A New Methodology for the Study of EIAs
- 9 Adaption to Scheduling Differences and Economic Realities
- Part IV Analysis of the Selected Services Agreements
- Book part
- Index
Summary
The chapter puts forward a new methodology to study services commitments of preferential trade agreements. The method is suitable for all services agreements but is particularly applicable for the analysis and coding of services commitments by federal states and entities. The method is based on the legal criteria of Art. V GATS, as explained in previous Chapter 2 of Part I of the book.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Preferential Services LiberalizationThe Case of the European Union and Federal States, pp. 189 - 209Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019