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Syllabus Developing countries international trade and financial institutions - 58713
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Last update 30-08-2020
HU Credits: 2

Degree/Cycle: 2nd degree (Master)

Responsible Department: International Relations

Semester: 2nd Semester

Teaching Languages: Hebrew

Campus: Mt. Scopus

Course/Module Coordinator: Prof. Moshe Hirsch

Coordinator Email: moshe.hirsch@mail.huji.ac.il

Coordinator Office Hours: Wednesday 12:15-13:15 (by appointment)

Teaching Staff:
Prof Moshe Hirsch

Course/Module description:
This course focuses on several major topics regarding economic development, the position of developing countries in the contemporary trading system, and finanial assistance to these countries. The
course would address the principal dimensions and measurement of
"underdevelopment", principal theories of development (i.e., why some countries
managed to become 'developed' while the other remained underdeveloped?), the debate regarding financial assistance to developing countries, the
basic principles of the GATT/WTO legal system, the WTO special rules regarding trade
with developing countries

Course/Module aims:
The students will acquire knowledge and analytical tools regarding economic
development and the special position of developing countries in the world trading
system.

Learning outcomes - On successful completion of this module, students should be able to:
Define economic development according to various parameters and Acquire
knowledge regarding the particular features of developing countries.
Assess the principal theoretical approaches to economic development.
Acquire knowledge regarding the legal principles of the international trading system
and the particular positions of developing countries in this system.
Apply the above theoretical approaches as well as principles of the international
trade to a particular developing country.

Attendance requirements(%):
90%

Teaching arrangement and method of instruction: Teaching and discussions

Course/Module Content:
The common features of developing countries, theories of development, the main
principles of the World Trade Organization legal ystem, the particular position of developing
countries in the World Trade Organization

Required Reading:
Updated reading list will be published before the academic year starts
1. Development: Definitions, Measurement and Consequences
1.– Alastair Creig, David Hulme and Mark Turner, Challenging Global Inequality: Development Theory and Practice in the 21st. Century (Palgrave, 2007), 30-52.
2. Human Development Index and its Components 2014


3. Adam Szirmaim, Developing Countries and the Concept of Development (Cambridge University Press, 2005)

2. Theories of Development
1. John Rapley, Understanding Development: Theory and Practice in the Third World (3rth. ed., Lynne Rienner, 2007) pp. 13-34, 47-52, 63-83.
2. Dennis Conway, 'Neoliberalism: Globalization's Neoconservative Enforcer of Austerity', in The Companion to Development Studies (3rd. ed., Vandana Desai & Robert B. Potter, eds., 2014), pp. 106-11.

3. Dennis Conway and Nikolas Heynen, 'Dependency Theories: From ECLA to Andre Gunder Frnak and Beyond', in The Companion to Development Studies (3rd. ed., Vandana Desai & Robert B. Potter, eds., 2014), pp 111-115.

4. Douglass C. North, The New Institutional Economics and Development (1993),

5. Worldwide Governance Indicators,
http://info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi/index.aspx#home
Worldwide Governance Indicators Frequently Asked Questions:
http://info.worldbank.org/governance/wgi/index.aspx#faq

6. F. Halsey Rogers, The Global Financial Crisis and Development Thinking (World Bank Policy Research Working Paper 5353, June 2010)


3. The World Trade Organization: Basic Principles
1. WTO, Principles of the Trading System, http://www.wto.org/english/thewto_e/whatis_e/tif_e/fact2_e.htm

2. M. Trebilcock, R. Howse, and Antonia Eliason, The Regulation of International Trade (4rth. Ed., 2013) pp. 24-41.

4. Tariffs and the Most-Favored Nation Principle
1. Andrew T. Guzman and Joost H. B. Pauwelyn, International Trade Law (2ed. Ed., 2012) pp. 303-306 (MFN), 680-690 (Enabling clause), 181-190 (tariffs)

2. Sonia E. Rolland, Development at the WTO (Oxford University Press 2012) 109-117, 153-164

3. Regulation (EU) No 978/2012 of The European Parliament and of the Council of 25 October 2012, applying a scheme of generalised tariff preferences and repealing Council Regulation (EC) No 732/2008, Official Journal of the European Union L 303/1, 31.10.2012, Article 9

4. The African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA),
Summary: http://trade.gov/agoa/legislation/index.asp

5. Brock R. Williams, African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA): Background and Reauthorization (2015)



5. National Treatment, Quantitative Restrictions, Non-Tariff Barriers & General Exceptions

1. Bernard M. Hoekman and Michel M. Kostecki, The Political Economy of the World Trading System: The WTO and Beyond (3rd. ed., 2009) 203-208 (on QRs), 236-259 (on standards), 199-203 (on ‘national treatment’).
2. Peter Van den Bossche, The Law and Policy of the World Trade Organization: Text, Cases and Materials (3rd. Ed., Cambridge University Press, 2014) pp. 545-560 (general exceptions)

3. Melaku Desta & Moshe Hirsch, “The African Countries in the World Trading System: International Trade, Domestic Institutions and the Role of International Law”, International & Comparative Law Quarterly (January 2012).

6. Corruption, Rule of Law and Developing Countries
1. Corruption Perceptions Index, https://www.transparency.org/cpi2014/results
2. Culture of Corruption: How an American agribusiness giant's alleged bribes illustrate Ukraine's endemic graft problem, Foreign Policy, April 3, 2014

2. Wouters, Jan and Ryngaert, Cedric and Cloots, Ann Sofie, "The Fight Against Corruption in International Law" pp. 5-34 (July 2012)

3. Rose, Cecily, Questioning the Role of International Arbitration in the Fight Against Corruption (2013), Leiden Law School Research Paper
4. Benjamin A. Olken and Rohini Pande, Corruption in Developing Countries, Annual Review of Economics, vol. 4 , 479-509 (2012)
5. Transparency International, Corruption: Cost for Developing Countries (2007)


7. Regional Trade Agreements & North – South Economic Integration
1. Moshe Hirsch, "North-South Regional Trade Agreements: Prospects, Risks and Legal Regulation", in Law and Development Perspective on International Trade Law (Y.S. Lee et al., , eds., Cambridge University Press, 2011) pp. 225 – 245.

2. Sonia E. Rolland, Development at the WTO (Oxford University Press 2012), 273-282.

3. Caroline Freund and Emanuel Ornelas, Regional trade agreements: blessing or burden? (2010)


8. Intellectual Property Protection & Public Health
1. Brian Mercurio, Intellectual Property Rights, Trade, and Economic Development, in Law and Development Perspective on International Trade Law 49 - 80 (Y.S. Lee, Tomer Broude, eds., Cambridge University Press, 2011).

2. Emmanuel Hassan, Ohid Yaqub, Stephanie Diepeveen, Intellectual Property and Developing Countries (Rand Europe, 2010)
3. Declaration on the TRIPS Agreement and Public Health, 20 November 2001

Additional Reading Material:

Grading Scheme :

Additional information:
Every student will present a topic in the class and submit a written assignment at the end of the course (this written assignment - 90% of the grade)
-10% for continuous participation in discussions held in the class
 
Students needing academic accommodations based on a disability should contact the Center for Diagnosis and Support of Students with Learning Disabilities, or the Office for Students with Disabilities, as early as possible, to discuss and coordinate accommodations, based on relevant documentation.
For further information, please visit the site of the Dean of Students Office.
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