The WTO Transit Regime for Landlocked Countries and its Impacts on Members' Regional Transit Agreements: The Case of Afghanistan's Transit Trade with » książka
Termin realizacji zamówienia: ok. 20 dni roboczych.
Darmowa dostawa!
This book assesses Afghanistan’s transit trade with Pakistan in the context of WTO transit regime for landlocked countries and its impacts on Members’ regional transit agreements. The key questions this book seeks to answer are the extent Afghanistan can benefit from WTO transit rules in demanding freedom of transit through the territory of Pakistan, how these rules influence the transit agreement concluded between Afghanistan and Pakistan, and finally how useful it would be to challenge Pakistan under the WTO dispute settlement system for its failure to provide Afghanistan freedom of transit and free access to and from the sea.
Suhailah Akbari, born in September 1990 in Takhar Afghanistan, is Director for International and Regional Cooperation at the Legal Unit of the President of Islamic Republic of Afghanistan and an associate professor of law at Takhar University where she teaches Afghanistan’s trade and financial laws and international trade law courses. She holds a bachelor’s in law from Kabul University, an LL.M through Fulbright Scholarship from the University of Washington and a PhD in law from Passau University in Germany. Ms. Akbari's legal expertise surrounds Afghanistan's foreign trade legal regime and the law of the World Trade Organization (WTO). She also is a lawyer holding Afghanistan’s bar Association’s certificate, civil society and women rights activist and advocates for gender equality. She has used her lawyering and professorship career to promote the right to equal higher education for girls in Takhar and has received multiple awards for her social and women rights activism.
She has also worked in various positions with national and international organizations such as with the GIZ, Moore Afghanistan and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Afghanistan as a consultant, and with the Counterpart International Organization as a capacity building master trainer.
This book assesses Afghanistan’s transit trade with Pakistan in the context of WTO transit regime for landlocked countries and its impacts on Members’ regional transit agreements. The key questions this book seeks to answer are the extent Afghanistan can benefit from WTO transit rules in demanding freedom of transit through the territory of Pakistan, how these rules influence the transit agreement concluded between Afghanistan and Pakistan, and finally how useful it would be to challenge Pakistan under the WTO dispute settlement system for its failure to provide Afghanistan freedom of transit and free access to and from the sea.