The Process – Stages in a Typical WTO Dispute Settlement Case
- By: Antony Taubman
- Source: A Handbook on the WTO Dispute Settlement System , pp 9-9
- Publication Date: June 2004
- DOI: https://doi.org/10.30875/4e1dacae-en
- Language: English
This chapter explains all the various stages through which a dispute can pass in the WTO dispute settlement system. There are two main ways to settle a dispute once a complaint has been filed in the WTO: (i) the parties find a mutually agreed solution, particularly during the phase of bilateral consultations; and (ii) through adjudication, including the subsequent implementation of the panel and Appellate Body reports, which are binding upon the parties once adopted by the DSB. There are three main stages to the WTO dispute settlement process: (i) consultations between the parties; (ii) adjudication by panels and, if applicable, by the Appellate Body; and (iii) the implementation of the ruling, which includes the possibility of countermeasures in the event of failure by the losing party to implement the ruling.
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