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Judging from Venus: A Response to Joost Pauwelyn

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Gabrielle Marceau
Affiliation:
Legal Affairs Division of the WTO
Catherine Quinn
Affiliation:
UNIGE
Juan Pablo Moya Hoyos
Affiliation:
Legal Affairs Division of the WTO
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In this short response, we offer some additional context to the appointment of government officials as World Trade Organization (WTO) panelists, some information on the role of the Secretariat and areas of cross-fertilization.

The Involvement of Panel Members Working for Government

Pauwelyn emphasizes that a significant proportion of WTO panel members have a substantial government background. His numbers indicate that for the period 1995-2014, 88 percent of WTO panelists had worked a minimum of “three years in government as diplomats, negotiators, bureaucrats, ministers and so on.” However, if we look at whether the panelists are employed by governments, either as diplomats or trade specialists, at the time of their appointment as WTO panelists, the figure changes dramatically: only about 50 percent of WTO panelists are employed in government at the time of their nomination. In accordance with Article 8.9 of the Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU), the procedural rules applicable to WTO dispute settlement proceedings, panelists serve in their individual capacities and not as government representatives.

Information

Type
Symposium on Joost Pauwelyn, “The Rule of Law Without the Rule of Lawyers? Why Investment Arbitrators are from Mars, Trade Adjudicators are from Venus”
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of International Law 2015