Exploring the Link between Trade and Cultural Protection In the Context of Anti-Dumping
Journal of World Trade, Vol. 42, No.3, pp. 563-586, 2008
26 Pages Posted: 15 Sep 2010
Date Written: June 1, 2008
Abstract
With the conclusion of the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization’s (UNESCO) Convention on the Protection and Promotion of the Diversity of Cultural Expressions on 20 October 2005, the complex issue of culture and cultural diversity is gaining a new prominence internationally. Insofar as cultural safeguard instruments are concerned, measures available to domestic cultural industries to respond to the importation of foreign cultural imports are obviously rather limited in the WTO. In this paper, the author argues that the notion that cultural products are per se unlike is unsuitable for the purpose of the anti-dumping measure. On this point, the conflict arising from the interactions between trade and culture will be particularly identified. In addition, the author also argues that the insertion of public interest clause into anti-dumping regimes connecting trade and cultural concerns could possibly explore a useful avenue for a society to satisfy its preference for cultural diversity in the anti-dumping action. Along this way, a case on an on-going anti-dumping investigation on uncoated printing and writing paper in Taiwan will be examined from a cultural perspective.
Keywords: cultural diversity, like product, public interest, anti-dumping
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