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The (Absence of) Direct Effect of WTO Law - Current Developments within the Indian Legal System
Nupur Chowdhury School of Management and Governance, University of Twente; The Energy and Resources Institute (TERI) May 20, 2008 Abstract: This chapter gives an overview of the status of international law under the Indian Constitution and its implications for the status of the WTO Agreement and the covered agreements within the Indian legal system. The Indian legal system is dualistic and international legal instruments ratified by the country become part of the national system only when it is transposed into national law. However such a strict interpretation has often been circumvented by the Courts in favor of a direct applicability of international law on the basis of the principle of consistent interpretation as provided for in the Constitution. In that sense it is interesting to note that notwithstanding the dualistic nature of the legal system, the Courts have applied the consistent interpretation, supremacy and the (in)direct effect principles in a varied number of cases to strengthen the conformity of national law with international law. In that sense, the relationship between these principles is dynamic and can be temporally located within the different trends of judicial activism in the Indian courts. Amongst the WTO agreement it is the TRIPS agreement that has been at the center of most legal disputes. Given the considerable economic interests of the Indian biotechnology sector (drugs and pharmaceuticals) and therefore the high stakes, in concomitance with the considerable textual ambiguity, which the TRIPS amendment has created, this is not surprising. It also underlines the currency of such a debate on the application of the principle of direct effect in the present context of the Indian legal system.
Keywords: Direct Effect, TRIPS, India Working Paper SeriesDate posted: May 23, 2008 ; Last revised: March 18, 2009Suggested CitationContact Information
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