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The dispute over genetically modified organisms has brought the US and the EU into conflict. This book examines the dynamic interactions of domestic law and politics, transnational networks, international regimes, and global markets, through a theoretically grounded and empirically comprehensive analysis of the governance of GM foods and crops.
Mark A. Pollack is Associate Professor of Political Science at Temple University, where he teaches classes in international relations and European Union politics. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1995. He has also taught at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1995-2004) and was Senior Research Fellow in the transatlantic relations program at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy (2000-2002). His research agenda focuses on the role of international institutions in the regional and global governance, with specific projects examining the delegation of powers to the supranational organizations in the European Union, the creation of new mechanisms for the governance of the transatlantic relationship, the global governance of genetically modified organisms, and the "mainstreaming " of gender issues in international organizations. Professor Gregory Shaffer is Melvin C. Steen Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School. He was previously Professor of Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where he was also Director of the University's European Union Center and Co-Director and Senior Fellow of its Center on World Affairs and the Global Economy, and the inaugural Wing-Tat Lee Chair of International Law at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Professor Shaffer is a recipient of two US National Science Foundation Law and Social Science grants for his work on the World Trade Organization, a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar for his study of transatlantic regulatory conflict and cooperation, and a Senior Research Fellow at the International Centre on Trade and Sustainable Development for its work on WTO dispute settlement and developing countries.
Show moreThe dispute over genetically modified organisms has brought the US and the EU into conflict. This book examines the dynamic interactions of domestic law and politics, transnational networks, international regimes, and global markets, through a theoretically grounded and empirically comprehensive analysis of the governance of GM foods and crops.
Mark A. Pollack is Associate Professor of Political Science at Temple University, where he teaches classes in international relations and European Union politics. He received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1995. He has also taught at the University of Wisconsin-Madison (1995-2004) and was Senior Research Fellow in the transatlantic relations program at the European University Institute in Florence, Italy (2000-2002). His research agenda focuses on the role of international institutions in the regional and global governance, with specific projects examining the delegation of powers to the supranational organizations in the European Union, the creation of new mechanisms for the governance of the transatlantic relationship, the global governance of genetically modified organisms, and the "mainstreaming " of gender issues in international organizations. Professor Gregory Shaffer is Melvin C. Steen Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota Law School. He was previously Professor of Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where he was also Director of the University's European Union Center and Co-Director and Senior Fellow of its Center on World Affairs and the Global Economy, and the inaugural Wing-Tat Lee Chair of International Law at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Professor Shaffer is a recipient of two US National Science Foundation Law and Social Science grants for his work on the World Trade Organization, a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar for his study of transatlantic regulatory conflict and cooperation, and a Senior Research Fellow at the International Centre on Trade and Sustainable Development for its work on WTO dispute settlement and developing countries.
Show moreList of Tables
Acronyms
Acknowledgements
1: Introduction and Overview: Biotechnology, Risk Regulation, and
the Failure of Cooperation
2: The Domestic Sources of the Conflict: Why the US and EU Biotech
Regulatory Regimes Differ
3: The Promise and Failure of Transatlantic Regulatory Cooperation
through Networks
4: Deliberation or Bargaining? Distributive Conflict and the
Fragmented International Regime Complex
5: WTO Dispute Settlement Meets GMOs: Who Decides?
6: US and EU Policies Since 2000: Change, Continuity and (Lack of)
Convergence
7: Conclusions: The Lessons of Transatlantic Conflict, Developing
Countries and the Future of Agricultural Biotechnology
References
Index
Mark A. Pollack is Associate Professor of Political Science at
Temple University, where he teaches classes in international
relations and European Union politics. He received his Ph.D. from
Harvard University in 1995. He has also taught at the University of
Wisconsin-Madison (1995-2004) and was Senior Research Fellow in the
transatlantic relations program at the European University
Institute in Florence, Italy (2000-2002). His research agenda
focuses on the role
of international institutions in the regional and global
governance, with specific projects examining the delegation of
powers to the supranational organizations in the European Union,
the creation of
new mechanisms for the governance of the transatlantic
relationship, the global governance of genetically modified
organisms, and the "mainstreaming " of gender issues in
international organizations.
Professor Gregory Shaffer is Melvin C. Steen Professor of Law at
the University of Minnesota Law School. He was previously Professor
of Law at the University of Wisconsin Law School, where he was also
Director of the University's European Union Center and Co-Director
and Senior Fellow of its Center on World Affairs and the Global
Economy, and the inaugural Wing-Tat Lee Chair of International Law
at Loyola University Chicago School of Law. Professor Shaffer is a
recipient of two US National
Science Foundation Law and Social Science grants for his work on
the World Trade Organization, a Fulbright Senior Research Scholar
for his study of transatlantic regulatory conflict and cooperation,
and a
Senior Research Fellow at the International Centre on Trade and
Sustainable Development for its work on WTO dispute settlement and
developing countries.
an illuminating and methodologically diverse book...not only a rich
interdisciplinary dissection of one of the most intractable trade
disputes but also a compelling account of the most spectacular
regulatory failure of transatlantic cooperation
*Alberto Alemanno, Common Market Law Review*
There is no doubt that this book constitutes a watershed in the
literature about the science-politics interface in the
international context, and especially in trans-Atlantic cooperation
(or lack thereof). The excellent, original, and highly inspiring
treatment of this issue, in both theoretical and empirical terms
across political and legal disciplines, brings to the fore the deep
interdependency in the bilateral, multilateral, and transnational
dimensions of the US-EU relations. The five lessons that the
authors draw in the concluding chapter open new venues for further
research on this matter. But above all, this book is the fruit of a
highly successful, tenacious, and systematic research endeavour
that provides new insights into this fascinating topic.
*Susana Borrás, Science and Public Policy*
The contribution of the work lies in its careful, comprehensive,
and ultimately convincing presentation of the arguments...Pollack
and Shaffer clearly state that the US and EU regulatory frameworks
have been produced in such different ways that they will be
resilient to change, even in the face of international pressures,
such as WTO rulings. The text contains many facts, a good
description, and its scope of research is wide. This book will
reward the reader - and cannot be ignored by anyone interested in
GMO conflict.
*Javier Guillem Carrau ommon Market Law Review*
An engaging and thorough study of a seemingly intractablehe
international trade dispute...Pollack and Shaffer evaluate the
potential outcomes of WTO panel approaches beyond that actually
adopted in the US-EU dispute using severalysis methodologies. Their
comparative institutional analysis of offers new and important
insights into the consequences of what might superficially seem to
be a typical question ofs exegesis and international treaties. The
book ably reveals the potentially weighty political and
institutionalgal consequences of choosing one seemingly technical
legaloice interpretation of a treaty over another, and of the
choices of treaties identified as those relevant to the
dispute.
*Aaron Fellmeth, Global Law Books*
The book shows the limits of diplomacy and international law in
areas of deeply entrenched differences of perceptions and attitudes
in a regulatory field. It offers many of the elements that need to
be taken into account in moving the matter forward in international
law in coming years. It is an excellent piece of analytical
research and highly recommended to all working in agricultural
biotechnology regulation and beyond.
*Thomas Cottier, World Trade Review*
When Cooperation Fails is a significant, original contribution
regarding the transatlantic dispute over the regulation of
genetically modified foods and crops. It is an outstanding and
highly informative study of the interaction of four global
regulatory regimes and the domestic legal and political responses
to them. Pollack and Shaffer provide a model for interdisciplinary
collaboration.
*Sabino Cassese, Judge, Italian Constitutional Court; Professor,
Scuola Normale Superiore of Pisa*
This book presents an original and an exhaustively researched
analysis of one of the difficult and intractable disputes in the
transatlantic relationship. It skillfully explores the complex
interaction between the national and international dimensions of
the GMO dispute in a way that clearly illuminates both the
potential and limitations of international regulatory cooperation.
Shaffer and Pollack have made a major contribution to our
understanding of the legal and political dynamics of
regulatory-related trade disputes.
*David Vogel, University of California, Berkeley*
Mark Pollack and Greg Shaffer's When Cooperation Fails is a
masterful analysis of the causes and consequences of the failure of
transatlantic cooperation as it relates to agricultural
biotechnology In short, while specialists in agricultural biotech
and transatlantic relations will find When Cooperation Fails
'must-reading', the book should also be engaged by a wide range of
specialists in international law, politics and political
economy.
*Joseph Jupille, EUSA Review*
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