July 05, 2018 | New York Law Journal
Trump's Trade Policies – A Broad PerspectiveThree books were recently published that help in the broad assessment of where President Trump's policies fit into U.S. political and international history. The fit is not good.
By Stuart S. Malawer
8 minute read
December 08, 2015 | New York Law Journal
Looking at Dispute Resolution in the Trans-Pacific PartnershipStuart S. Malawer writes: While the TPP is very controversial and politicized, and while it may never be passed by Congress, it is incumbent on lawyers and law professors to apply their objective assessment to the TPP provisions that are most closely related to their field: dispute resolution processes.
By Stuart S. Malawer
10 minute read
December 07, 2015 | New York Law Journal
Looking at Dispute Resolution in the Trans-Pacific PartnershipStuart S. Malawer writes: While the TPP is very controversial and politicized, and while it may never be passed by Congress, it is incumbent on lawyers and law professors to apply their objective assessment to the TPP provisions that are most closely related to their field: dispute resolution processes.
By Stuart S. Malawer
10 minute read
December 23, 2014 | New York Law Journal
Confronting Chinese Economic Cyber Espionage With WTO LitigationStuart S. Malawer, Distinguished Service Professor of Law and International Trade at George Mason University writes: Chinese economic cyber espionage—government hacking into computer networks of companies to gain commercial advantages for Chinese firms—is one of the most complex issues confronting U.S. national security and foreign policy today. A creative legal response is available.
By Stuart S. Malawer
11 minute read
September 01, 2003 | National Law Journal
Put Down the Genetically Modified TomatoesThe middle of a war on terrorism is no time to go ballistic on europe over genetically modified foods, contends professor Stuart Malawer.
By Stuart S. Malawer
8 minute read
August 08, 2013 | New York Law Journal
U.S.-China Litigation in the World Trade OrganizationStuart S. Malawer, the Distinguished Service Professor of Law and International Trade at George Mason University (School of Public Policy), writes: The World Trade Organization dispute resolution system a widely used litigation-oriented process at the core of global trade relations today. Both the United States and China have been aggressive users of it, each showing a willingness to address contentious issues. This has been to the benefit of both.
By Stuart S. Malawer
14 minute read
September 08, 2003 | The Legal Intelligencer
Put Down The Genetically Modified TomatoesFood fights are in poor taste among fraternity brothers or infant siblings. Among trading nations, they make even less sense. Before an unnecessary dispute over genetically modified foods spirals out of control, the United States should drop a World Trade Organization action recently initiated against the European Union.
By Stuart S. Malawer
8 minute read
October 03, 2011 | New York Law Journal
Chinese Investment and State Economic DevelopmentStuart S. Malawer, Distinguished Professor of Law and International Trade at George Mason University, writes that in response to increasingly bleak prospects, states have become more aggressive in the global marketplace. Fostering corporate investment from China is seen as one of the major strategies for job creation in the United States, and the federal government is becoming more supportive of states as they expand their international economic development efforts.
By Stuart S. Malawer
9 minute read
December 08, 2004 | New York Law Journal
World Trade Organization After 10 Years: Litigation, ConsultationStuart Malawer, a professor of law at George Mason University and visiting professor at St. Peter's College of Oxford University, looks back on a decade of progress and analyzes the effect of the WTO's dispute resolution system on international law.
By Stuart S. Malawer
11 minute read
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