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DOI: 10.1177/1354066105055483 See You in Geneva? Legal (Mis)Representations of the Trading SystemQueens University, Kingston, Ontario, Canada When officials from different countries disagree about trade policy, some say see you in Geneva! meaning see you in court! In offering a pluralist alternative to this centralism of analysts and practitioners, I represent the World Trade Organization (WTO) not as a coercive court used for enforcement but as a site for the elaboration of a system of law that arises from and provides a framework for self-directed human interaction. Trade law is shaped in the shadow of bargaining. I contrast this legal representation with legalization to show the contribution it makes to constructivist international theory. An empirical probe in the contentious domain of the WTO Agreement on Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (SPS) asks about the relative importance of the few formal SPS disputes compared with other ways that WTO law affects global food safety. A discussion of how the trading system responded to mad cow disease (BSE) provides empirical confirmation of pluralist insights. Far from being only in Geneva, trade law is everywhere.
Key Words: BSE constructivism disputes legal pluralism Sanitary and Phyto-sanitary Measures trade law WTO
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