国产成人精品日本亚洲专区6-国产成人精品三区-国产成人精品实拍在线-国产成人精品视频-国产成人精品视频2021

  • 法律圖書館

  • 新法規速遞

  • WTO Dispute Settlement Mechanism(7)

    [ 劉成偉 ]——(2003-7-7) / 已閱61631次

    However, in any event, the new Art. 17.5(ii) is not without any merit but causing uncertainty. As to be shown below, there is a clear connection between Arts. 17.6(i) and 17.5(ii). The facts of the matter referred to in Art. 17.6(i) are “the facts made available in conformity with appropriate domestic procedures to the authorities of the importing Member” under Art. 17.5(ii). Art. 17.6(i) places a limitation on the panel in the circumstances defined by the Article. The aim of Art. 17.6(i) is to prevent a panel from “second-guessing” a determination of a national authority when the establishment of the facts is proper and the evaluation of those facts is unbiased and objective. It bears more significance that the panel note the importance of Art. 17.5(ii) in guiding their decisions in this regard. It is a specific provision directing a panel's decision as to what evidence it will consider in examining a claim under the AD Agreement. Moreover, it effectuates the general principle that panels reviewing the determinations of investigating authorities in anti-dumping cases are not to engage in de novo review.
    Most importantly, Art. 17.5(ii) can never be deemed to require that a panel consider those facts exclusively in the format in which they were originally available to the investigating authority. In any event, the statement of Art. 17.5(ii) that the DSB shall establish a panel to examine the matter based upon: “the facts made available in conformity with appropriate domestic procedures to the authorities of the importing Member”, does not mean that a panel is frozen into inactivity. It does not offer any basis for refusing to consider a claim by a party in a dispute settlement merely because the subject matter of the claim were not raised before the investigating authorities under national law. This is to be confirmed by some rulings from the Appellate Body below.
    Whatever merits Art. 17.6 of the AD Agreement bears, it offers no clear guidance rather than causing some issues of interpretation. Therefore, the author thinks it much useful and unavoidable to examine how and to what extent the Appellate Body have applied and interpreted this article.
    In this regard, the Appellate Body in Thailand-H-beams (DS122) consider the extent of a panel's obligations under Art. 17.6 to review the investigating authority's final determination, and they rule as: 16
    “Articles 17.5 and 17.6 clarify the powers of review of a panel established under the Anti-Dumping Agreement. These provisions place limiting obligations on a panel, with respect to the review of the establishment and evaluation of facts by the investigating authority. …
    Article 17.5 specifies that a panel's examination must be based upon the ‘facts made available’ to the domestic authorities. Anti-dumping investigations frequently involve both confidential and non-confidential information. The wording of Article 17.5 does not specifically exclude from panel examination facts made available to domestic authorities, but not disclosed or discernible to interested parties by the time of the final determination. Based on the wording of Article 17.5, we can conclude that a panel must examine the facts before it, whether in confidential documents or non-confidential documents.
    Article 17.6(i) requires a panel, in its assessment of the facts of the matter, to determine whether the authorities' ‘establishment of the facts’ was ‘proper’. The ordinary meaning of ‘establishment’ suggests an action to ‘place beyond dispute; ascertain, demonstrate, prove’; the ordinary meaning of ‘proper’ suggests ‘accurate’ or ‘correct’. Based on the ordinary meaning of these words, the proper establishment of the facts appears to have no logical link to whether those facts are disclosed to, or discernible by, the parties to an anti-dumping investigation prior to the final determination. Article 17.6(i) requires a panel also to examine whether the evaluation of those facts was ‘unbiased and objective’. The ordinary meaning of the words ‘unbiased’ and ‘objective’ also appears to have no logical link to whether those facts are disclosed to, or discernible by, the parties to an anti-dumping investigation at the time of the final determination.
    There is a clear connection between Articles 17.6(i) and 17.5(ii). The facts of the matter referred to in Article 17.6(i) are ‘the facts made available in conformity with appropriate domestic procedures to the authorities of the importing Member’ under Article 17.5(ii). Such facts do not exclude confidential facts made available to the authorities of the importing Member. Rather, Article 6.5 explicitly recognizes the submission of confidential information to investigating authorities and its treatment and protection by those authorities. Article 12, in paragraphs 2.1, 2.2 and 2.3, also recognizes the use, treatment and protection of confidential information by investigating authorities. The ‘facts’ referred to in Articles 17.5(ii) and 17.6(i) thus embrace ‘all facts confidential and non-confidential’, made available to the authorities of the importing Member in conformity with the domestic procedures of that Member. Article 17.6(i) places a limitation on the panel in the circumstances defined by the Article. The aim of Article 17.6(i) is to prevent a panel from ‘second-guessing’ a determination of a national authority when the establishment of the facts is proper and the evaluation of those facts is unbiased and objective. Whether evidence or reasoning is disclosed or made discernible to interested parties by the final determination is a matter of procedure and due process. These matters are very important, but they are comprehensively dealt with in other provisions, notably Articles 6 and 12 of the Anti-Dumping Agreement.
    Articles 17.5 and 17.6(i) require a panel to examine the facts made available to the investigating authority of the importing Member. These provisions do not prevent a panel from examining facts that were not disclosed to, or discernible by, the interested parties at the time of the final determination.
    We, therefore, reverse the Panel's interpretation that, in reviewing an injury determination under Article 3.1, a panel is required under Article 17.6(i), in assessing whether the establishment of facts is proper, to ascertain whether the ‘factual basis’ of the determination is ‘discernible’ from the documents that were available to the interested parties and/or their legal counsel in the course of the investigation and at the time of the final determination; and, in assessing whether the evaluation of the facts is unbiased and objective, to examine the ‘analysis and reasoning’ in only those documents ‘to ascertain the connection between the disclosed factual basis and the findings’.”







    【NOTE】:
    1 See, Steven P. Croley and John H. Jackson, ‘WTO Dispute Panel Deference to National Government Decisions. The Misplaced Analogy to the U.S. Chevron Standard-Of-Review Doctrine’, International Trade Law and the GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement System (Petersmann Ed.), Kluwer Law International, London, 1997, p. 195.
    2 See, WT/DS189/R/6.2-6.3. Also applied in, e.g., WT/DS141/R/6.45; WT/DS179/R/6.3.
    3 See, WT/DS184/R/7.26.
    4 See, WT/DS189/R/6.5. Also applied in, e.g., WT/DS141/R/6.46; WT/DS179/R/6.4.
    5 See, WT/DS184/R/7.28.
    6 See, in detail, note 1 above, pp. 194-195.
    7 See, e.g., note 1 above, pp. 195-197.
    8 See, in detail, WT/DS184/AB/R/51-62.
    9 See, WT/DS132/AB/RW/130.
    10 See, in detail, Jacques H. J. Bourgeois, ‘GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement Practice in the Field of Anti-dumping Law’, International Trade Law and the GATT/WTO Dispute Settlement System (Petersmann Ed.), Kluwer Law International, London, 1997, pp.292-293.
    11 See, in detail, note 10 above, p. 294.
    12 See, WT/DS141/R/6.43.
    13 See, in detail, WT/DS184/R/7.6-7.7.
    14 See, in detail, WT/DS184/R/7.9-7.10; 7.12.
    15 See, in detail, note 10 above, p. 310.
    16 See, in detail, WT/DS122/AB/R/114-119.



    總共6頁  [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] 6

    上一頁  

    ==========================================

    免責聲明:
    聲明:本論文由《法律圖書館》網站收藏,
    僅供學術研究參考使用,
    版權為原作者所有,未經作者同意,不得轉載。

    ==========================================

    論文分類

    A 法學理論

    C 國家法、憲法

    E 行政法

    F 刑法

    H 民法

    I 商法

    J 經濟法

    N 訴訟法

    S 司法制度

    T 國際法


    Copyright © 1999-2021 法律圖書館

    .

    .

    主站蜘蛛池模板: 国内国语一级毛片在线视频 | 成人午夜大片免费看爽爽爽 | 日韩第一视频 | 久久亚洲国产精品五月天 | 久久一区二区三区免费播放 | 成年美女毛片黄网站色奶头大全 | 国产日韩一区二区 | 18美女福利视频网站免费观看 | 香蕉久久久久 | 999色综合 | 国产最新精品精品视频 | 国产欧美日韩一区二区三区视频 | 一区二区在线观看高清 | 一级一级人与动毛片 | 亚洲欧美偷拍视频 | 亚洲伦理一区二区 | 久久伊人中文字幕 | 久久乐国产精品亚洲综合m3u8 | 免费黄视频在线观看 | 亚洲精品日本高清中文字幕 | 亚洲综合精品成人 | 大杳蕉伊人狼人久久一本线 | 久热香蕉在线爽青青 | 亚洲~首页~原始 | 日本一级淫片a 免费播放口 | 一级做a爰片欧美一区 | 亚洲人人精品 | 美乳在线播放 | 在线精品视频播放 | 亚洲国产网 | 欧美成人午夜剧场 | 黄色免费观看 | 中文字幕无线码欧美成人 | 精品国产电影网久久久久婷婷 | 性刺激视频在线观看免费 | 91香蕉国产在线观看人员 | 国产高清国内精品福利色噜噜 | 青草视频在线观看国产 | 一区在线看 | 久久国产三级 | 特一级黄色录像 |