2018
DOI: 10.1111/1758-5899.12554
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Inter‐Governmental Regimes and Recruitment to Private Regimes:GATT/WTOand theISO, 1951–2005

Abstract: Scholars of international relations and public policy recognize that quasi-private actors supply governance services alongside governmental actors. We explore how membership in the dominant trade regime, the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade/the World Trade Organization (GATT/WTO) influences countries' incentives to join the quasi-private regime, International Organization for Standardization (ISO). Both global regimes seek to remove trade barriers; the former focuses on tariff and non-tariff obstacles, a… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Trade treaties and agreements such as GATT/WTO are supranational institutions that restrict individual governments’ ability to impose trade barriers, including bans, on products from other countries – referred to as non-tariff barriers to trade. Both inter-governmental regimes such as the GATT/WTO and private regimes such as the ISO are concerned with facilitating trade via harmonization (Lim & Prakash, 2018) which implies ‘moving towards a single standard’ (Slaughter, 2005, p. 59). As the ISO is recognized by inter-governmental bodies, including the EU parliament and the WTO, as an international rule-making body, the creation of an ISO standard to deal with an issue provides the grounds to challenge a product ban in the WTO system.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Trade treaties and agreements such as GATT/WTO are supranational institutions that restrict individual governments’ ability to impose trade barriers, including bans, on products from other countries – referred to as non-tariff barriers to trade. Both inter-governmental regimes such as the GATT/WTO and private regimes such as the ISO are concerned with facilitating trade via harmonization (Lim & Prakash, 2018) which implies ‘moving towards a single standard’ (Slaughter, 2005, p. 59). As the ISO is recognized by inter-governmental bodies, including the EU parliament and the WTO, as an international rule-making body, the creation of an ISO standard to deal with an issue provides the grounds to challenge a product ban in the WTO system.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Since the mid-1990s, ISO received increased attention in the political science and international relations literature. Most studies, with the notable exception of Morikawa and Morrison (2004) and Lim and Prakash (2018), are based on case studies on individual standards such as ISO 14001 (Environmental management) (Kollman and Prakash, 2001;Potoski and Prakash, 2005b,a;Potoski, 2006a,b, 2007) or ISO 9000 (Quality management) (Casper and Hancké, 1999;Guler et al, 2002). Other contributions focus on selected technical committees such as ISO TC 228 (Tourism) and ISO TC 229 (Nanotechnologies) (Graz and Hauert, 2019).…”
Section: Data Collectedmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, the ISO website only provides information on the current status of members and cooperation organizations but not on their engagement over the almost 70 year long history of the organization. Even studies on members' ISO membership, which can vary yearly between no membership, full-, subscriber-, or correspondent membership, only appeared relatively recently (Lim and Prakash, 2018).…”
Section: Data Collectedmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The standards of ISO, for instance, affect almost every part of life, ranging from quality management and information security management to occupational health and safety and social responsibility. Yet, with a few exceptions (Büthe & Mattli, 2011; Klotz, 2021; Lim & Prakash, 2018; Murphy & Yates, 2009), there is relatively little scholarly work on ISO and the actors driving standardisation. The same can be said about the Codex Alimentarius, a standardisation organisation that governs a long list of food safety topics including the minimum amount of cocoa in chocolate or the maximum residue limits of pesticides in food.…”
Section: Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%