77908 - INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND INVESTMENT LAW RE-GLOBE

Academic Year 2023/2024

  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
  • Campus: Bologna
  • Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in European Studies (cod. 5983)

    Also valid for Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Legal Studies (cod. 9062)
    Single cycle degree programme (LMCU) in Law (cod. 9232)

Learning outcomes

The course is aimed at providing the students with the basic knowledge of the multilateral trade system (the WTO system) and international investment law. The course is aimed at conferring the students the ability to recognize the interests underlying those rules and legal instruments to enforce them, especially through the dynamics of argumentation emerging from international litigation. Moreover, it provides students with analytical skills to assess, research and critically debate the functioning of the Eu internal market in the respect of the principles and obligations of the international trade law. At the end of the course the student is expected to know the layers of governance of the issue at the European and global level; to acknowledge the main challenges key actors identify with respect to the functioning of the internal market and its relationship with the international trade law.

Course contents

The course of International Trade and Investment Law is financed by the European Union as Jean Monnet Module, and called Re-Globe - Reforming the Global Economic Governance: The EU for SDGs in International Economic Law

Programme of the Course 

 Introduction: International Economic Law, the European Union and the Sustainable Development Goals

The WTO System: The Institutional Structure

The WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism: Basic Aspects

The WTO Appellate Body: Functioning and Crisis

The EU Approach to the WTO Appellate Body Crisis: The Multi-Party Interim Appeal Arbitration Arrangement (MPIA)

The Principle of Non-Discrimination: The Most-Favoured Nation Clause and the Principle of National Treatment

Non-Trade Values in the WTO System: GATT Article XX

Non-Trade Values in the WTO System: GATT Article XXI

Economic Sanctions and International Economic Law: The Case of the Sanctions against Russia

The Trade and Sustainable Development Chapters in the EU Free Trade Agreements (FTAs)

Bilateral Dispute Settlement Mechanisms in the EU FTAs: the Ukraine – Export of Certain Wood Products Case and the EU/Korean Labour Standards Case

The WTO TBT Agreement and its Case-Law

The SPS Agreement and its case law

WTO Trade Remedies

The GATS Agreement

The WTO TRIPS Agreement, Health Concerns and Waivers

Investment Law: Basic Principles and Standards

Settlement of International Investment Disputes

Due Diligence and International Investment Law

The EU Approach to Investor-State Dispute Settlement: EU practice in International Investment Arbitration - The EU Project for a Multilateral Investment Court

The EU Approach on Transparency in International Litigation on Investments

The EU and the ‘Greening’ of the Energy Charter Treaty: towards the Protection and Promotion of Clean Energy

EU Investment Policy: International Investment law and the Right to Regulate

The European Parliament and International Economic Law Agreements

EU Unilateral Instruments: Enforcement Regulation; the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM); the EU Anti-Coercion Instrument, the EU Trade Barriers Regulation


Readings/Bibliography

For students attending the Re-Globe lectures the programme will be developed during the course, an the materials will be provided during the lectures. The uploading of the materials and of the power point used during the lectures will be made at the end of each week of lectures on the Virtuale platform

For students not attending the lectures:

Peter Van den Bossche, Denise Prévost, Essentials of WTO Law, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2021

M. Sornarajah, The International Law on Foreign Investment, Cambridge University Press, 2020

See also the dedicated Re-Globe website Re-Globe - Reforming the Global Economic Governance: The EU for SDGs in International Economic Law (unibo.it) [https://site.unibo.it/reglobe/en], and the Re-Globe Twitter account https://twitter.com/ReGlobe_jm

Teaching methods

Lectures 

For students who did not previously attend a course of International Law, we advise the following reading: Jan Klabbers, International Law, Cambridge University Press, 2020.

 

Assessment methods

Attending students can deliver the exam also according to the indications given during the lectures.

Non-attending students have to prepare the exam studying the indicated 2 textbooks.

Teaching tools

materials indicated during the lectures, power point presentations, videos

Office hours

See the website of Elisa Baroncini

SDGs

Quality education Affordable and clean energy Decent work and economic growth Responsible consumption and production

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.