Readership: Scholars and academics in the fields of international trade law, law and economics, andcompetition and antitrust law.
Won-Mog Choi, Professor of International Trade Law, Ewha Womans University
"Professor Won-Mog Choi's book on "like" products in world trade law will be met with great interest by academics and practitioners working in international trade law alike. The study is an important and valuable contribution to an aspect of trade law, which has not received a thorough academic analysis until now." - The King's College Law Journal
"... an impressive and stimulating contribution to the analysis of one of the most important issues of international trade law ... the book undoubtedly provides much "food for thought" for anyone interested in the future f the international trading system and its conclusions deserve a lot of attention not only in Geneva." - The King's College Law Journal
"The puzzle of what "like products" are, or should be, continues to motivate new trade law scholarship. 'Like Products' in International Trade Law is a significant contribution to that literature." - The American Journal of International Law
"Choi's study makes an important contribution to the task of ascertaining the likeness of two products under trade law and is a valuable addition to the emerging literature of economic analysis of international trade law." - The American Journal of International Law
1: The Relationship Between Law and Economics: The Divide Types of Law and Economics Constraints of Discretion, justification and Acceptability 2: Applying the Relationship to GATT Law: Across the Divide Conceptual Classification of Relationship Between Goods Evidential Elements to Define Likeness or Substitutability Analytical Framework for Likeness or Substitutability Analysis 3: Progressive Interpretation of 'Like' and 'Directly Competitve or Substitutable' Products Non-discrimination Provisions Fair Trade Provisions Others 4: Conclusion