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Les interrelations entre les « trois organisations soeurs » et les mesures sanitaires et phytosanitaires de l'ASEAN : quel avenir pour la dignité humaine ?

Doctor :Thitirat WONGKAEW
Thesis date :18 December 2015
Hours :14:00
Discipline :Law
Add to calendar 12/18/2015 14:00 12/18/2015 17:00 Europe/Paris Les interrelations entre les « trois organisations soeurs » et les mesures sanitaires et phytosanitaires de l'ASEAN : quel avenir pour la dignité humaine ? The « three sisters », namely the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC), the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC), and SPS measures of ASEAN maintain a mutually close relationship and can interact with one another in complex and multidime... false MM/DD/YYYY
Jury :

Pascale MARTIN-BIDOU - Associate Professor

Sarah CASSELLA - Professor (Université du Maine)

Yann KERBRAT - Professor (université Panthéon-Sorbonne Paris 1)

Yves NOUVEL - Professor (Université Paris 2 Panthéon-Assas)

The « three sisters », namely the Codex Alimentarius Commission (CAC), the World Organisation for Animal Health (OIE) and the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC), and SPS measures of ASEAN maintain a mutually close relationship and can interact with one another in complex and multidimensional ways, which can affect flows of import and export activities of agro-food products regulated especially by international economic law. By perceiving law as a process of decisions, and particularly international law as a process of communication among different participants of the «world community», these interactions can be better identified and comprehended at all levels : multilateral, regional, bilateral and national. Considering the intensity and frequency of exchanges and the strong interdependency of today's world, the « three sisters » and their standards, guidelines and recommendations are likely to play numerous roles in promoting a greater production and wider distribution of fundamental values that all human beings desire to maximize and achieve, as defended by the « New Haven School of International Law ». Not only are these roles related to the promotion of a more efficient process of eliminating trade barriers deriving from SPS protectionist measures, but also those which are insufficiently highlighted, yet becoming more obvious through repeated practices of ASEAN decision-makers. These are notably the roles of the « three sisters » as performance drivers for monitoring mechanisms of SPS measures with a view to ensuring that they are reasonable in each specific context and respectful towards human dignity; as catalysts of open regionalism ; as promoters of the development dimension in regional trade agreements concluded by ASEAN.