- Paolo Davide Farah, Introduction and Overview of the Book
- Paolo Davide Farah, The Development of Global Justice and Sustainable Development Principles in the WTO: Multilateral Trading System through the Lens of Non-Trade Concerns: An Appraisal on China’s Progress
- Claudio Di Turi, Economic Globalization and Social Rights: the Role of the International Labor Organization and the WTO
- Angelica Bonfanti, Multinational Corporations and Corporate Social Responsibility in a Chinese Context: An International Law Perspective
- Leïla Choukroune, Rights Interest Litigation, Socio-Economic Rights and Chinese Labor Law Reform
- Valentina Sara Vadi, Law, Culture, and the Politics of Chinese Outward Foreign Investment
- Mark Klaver & Michael Trebilcock, Chinese Investment in Africa: Strengthening the Balance Sheet
- Francesco Sindico & Julie Gibson, Soft, Complex and Fragmented International Climate Change Practice: What Implications for International Trade Law?
- Imad Ibrahim, Thomas Deleuil, & Paolo Davide Farah, The Principle of Common but Differentiated Responsibilities in the International Regime of Climate Change
- Marion Lemoine, The Kyoto Protocol: Carbon Pricing and Trade Prospects. The Clean Development Mechanism from the Perspective of the Developing Countries
- Elena Cima, The Role of Domestic Policies in Fostering Technology Transfer: Evidence from China
- He Weidong, China's Environmental Legislation and Its Trend Towards Scientific Development
- Luo Li, Research on the Reform of the Judicial Relief System for Environmental Disputes in China
- Carla Peng, The Impact of the Kyoto Protocol and UNFCCC on Chinese Law and the Consequential Reforms to Fight Climate Change
- Zhixiong Huang, The Development of NGOs in China: A Case Study on Their Involvement with Climate Change
- Paolo Farah & Riccardo Tremolada, A Comparison Between Shale Gas in China and Unconventional Fuel Development in the United States: Health, Water and Environmental Risks
- Jean Yves Heurtebise, Understanding Non-Trade Concerns through Comparative Chinese and European Philosophy of Law
- Flavia Zorzi Giustiniani, The Right to Food in International Law and WTO Law: An Appraisal
- Ning Libiao, The Right to Food in China: Cultural Foundation, Present and Future
- James R. Simpson, Projections of China’s Food Security to 2030: Obligations as an Agricultural Superpower
- Roberto Soprano, China and the Recognition and Protection of the Human Right to Water
- Christophe Germann, China Meets Hollywood at WTO: Janus’ Faces of Freedom. Standards of Right and Wrong between National and International Moralities
- Rogier Creemers, Cultural Products and the WTO: China's Domestic Censorship and Media Control Policies
- Anselm Kamperman Sanders, Trade in Audiovisuals – The Case of China
- Danny Friedmann, Rise and Demise of US Social Media in China. A Touchstone of WTO and BIT Regulations
- Julien Chaisse & Xinjie Luan, Can Trade Restrictions Be Justified by Moral Values? Revisiting The Seals Disputes Through a Law and Economics Analysis
- Denise Prévost, Health Protection Measures as Barriers to EU Exports to China in the Framework of the WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures
- Lorenzo Di Masi, SPS, Public Health and Environmental Provisions in East Asia RTAs: ASEAN and China
- Lukasz Gruszczynski, Tivadar Otvoes, & Paolo Davide Farah, Product Safety in the Framework of the WTO Agreement on Technical Barriers to Trade
- Piercarlo Rossi, Non-Trade Concerns and Consumer Protection in China: Surrounding Issues
- A. Rajendra Prasad, Legal Protection of Consumers in Developing Countries: An Asian Perspective
- Hu Junhong, From Remedy of Damage to Risk Prevention. An Analysis of the New Legislative Implications of the Chapter on “Product Liability” in China’s Tort Liability Law from the Perspective of Consumer Protection
- Nadia Coggiola, Tort Liability for the Compensation of Damages Caused by Dangerous Substances in China
- Shujie Feng, Xin Shu & Ningning Zhang, The Protection of Biotechnological Innovation by Patent in the United States, Europe, France, and China. A Comparative Study from the Perspective of the TRIPs Agreement
- Jayashree Watal, Public Health, Intellectual Property Rights, and Developing Countries’ Access to Medicines
- Jianqiang Nie, The Relationship between the TRIPs Agreement and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD): Intellectual Property and Genetic Resources, Traditional Knowledge and Folk Protection from a Chinese Perspective
- Francesca Spigarelli & Andrea Filippet, Grasping Knowledge in Emerging Markets: is this the case of Western Pharmaceutical Companies in China?
Wednesday, December 7, 2016
Farah & Cima: China’s Influence on Non-Trade Concerns in International Economic Law
Paolo Davide Farah (West Virginia Univ. - Law) & Elena Cima (Graduate Institute of International Law and Development Studies) have published China’s Influence on Non-Trade Concerns in International Economic Law (Routledge 2017). Contents include: