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European Journal of International Law 2009 20(1):167-186; doi:10.1093/ejil/chn076
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The European Journal of International Law Vol. 20 no. 1 © EJIL 2009; all rights reserved

Taking Uncertainty Seriously: Adaptive Governance and International Trade: A Reply to Rosie Cooney and Andrew Lang

Mónica García-Salmones*

* LLD student and Research Fellow at the Erik Castrén Institute of International Law and Human Rights, University of Helsinki. I wish to thank Rosie Cooney and Andrew Lang for helping me to think about global governance with their article. My thanks also go to Jan Klabbers for organizing the seminar on global governance, which was an opportunity to explore this issue. Special thanks go to Martti Koskenniemi for his comments on earlier drafts of this text. The usual disclaimers apply. Email: monica.garcia{at}helsinki.fi


   Abstract

The use of experts' power in global networks is often concealed by describing it in the register of scientific truths. This text seeks to illustrate the phenomenon by reference to the recent article by Cooney and Lang, ‘Taking Uncertainty Seriously: Adaptive Governance and International Trade’, which appeared in this journal. The account those authors give of WTO law goes beyond a purely legitimacy-based structure focused on effectiveness. Instead, the question is framed in terms of cognitive achievements by regulators in the member states. The present article uses Cooney and Lang's project and the same example of the WTO in order to evaluate global governance. In so doing it analyses the functionalist style of public law, together with neofunctionalism and the historical phenomena by which increasing areas in the public sphere are attributed to regulators, both national and international. With this article, the author hopes to contribute to the debate about the tensions caused by the legal activity of international organizations in a world of equal sovereigns with unequal access to power. In conclusion it is suggested that, so far as contemporary global governance is concerned, the distribution of jurisdiction through regulation is the sphere in which the usual political struggles between international actors take place.


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