Rowman & Littlefield International / ECPR Press
Pages: 180
Trim: 6 x 8¾
978-1-78552-150-8 • Hardback • April 2016 • $84.00 • (£50.00)
978-1-78552-255-0 • Paperback • November 2016 • $49.00 • (£30.00)
Arlo Poletti is Assistant Professor of International Public Policy at the University LUISS Guido Carli (Rome, Italy) where he teaches international relations and international public policy. His research interests focus on the political economy of trade policy making, WTO judicial politics and interest groups’ lobbying. He has published on these topics in the Journal of Common Market Studies, Journal of European Public Policy, Regulation & Governance, West European Politics, Comparative European Politics and other outlets. Recently, he published a monographic study The European Union and Multilateral Trade Governance: The Politics of the Doha Round with Routledge. He obtained a PhD from the University of Bologna (Italy) and was a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Political Science of the University of Antwerp (Belgium).Dirk De Bièvre is Associate Professor of international politics and international political economy at the University of Antwerp (Flanders, Belgium). He studied in Leuven, Louvain-la-Neuve, and Konstanz, and obtained his PhD in Social and Political Sciences at the European University Institute in San Domenico di Fiesole in 2002. He is the author of numerous articles on European trade policy, the World Trade Organization, and interest group politics. Before joining the Antwerp Faculty in 2006, he was a postdoctoral researcher at the Max Planck Institute for Research on Collective Goods in Bonn, and an EU and Volkswagen Foundation research fellow at the Mannheim Centre for European Social Research (MZES). He occasionally taught at the universities of Brussels, Mannheim, Dresden, Leuven, and was a visiting fellow at the Department of Government of the London School of Economics and Political Science during the academic year 2014/15.
Table of ContentsList of Figures and Tables viiAbbreviations ixPreface xiChapter One – Introduction 1Chapter Two – Judicial Politics and the Litigation-Negotiation Nexus 11Chapter Three – Judicial Politics and the Liberalisation of Tariff Barriersto Trade 31Chapter Four – Judicial Politics and Regulatory Cooperation 49Chapter Five – Legal Vulnerability and Cooperation 69Chapter Six – WTO Judicialisation and the Specialisation of InterestMobilisation 99Conclusion 131Bibliography 135Index 159