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ON THIS PAGE: Clarification of rights and obligations |
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DISPUTE SETTLEMENT SYSTEM TRAINING MODULE: CHAPTER 1 Introduction to the WTO dispute settlement system |
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Clarification
of rights and obligations through interpretation
The precise scope of the rights and obligations contained in the WTO Agreement is not always evident from a mere reading of the legal texts. Legal provisions are often drafted in general terms so as to be of general applicability and to cover a multitude of individual cases, not all of which can be specifically regulated. Whether the existence of a certain set of facts gives rise to a violation of a legal requirement contained in a particular provision is, therefore, a question that is not always easy to answer. In most cases, the answer can be found only after interpreting the legal terms contained in the provision at issue. In addition, legal provisions in international agreements often lack clarity because they are compromise formulations resulting from multilateral negotiations. The various participants in a negotiating process often reconcile their diverging positions by agreeing to a text that can be understood in more than one way so as to satisfy the demands of different domestic constituents. The negotiators may thus understand a particular provision in different and opposing ways. For those reasons, as in any legal setting, individual cases often require an interpretation of the pertinent provisions. One might think that such an interpretation cannot occur in (WTO) dispute settlement proceedings because Article IX:2 of the WTO Agreement provides that the Ministerial Conference and the General Council of the WTO have the “exclusive authority to adopt interpretations” of the WTO Agreement. However, the DSU expressly states that the dispute settlement system is intended to clarify the provisions of the WTO Agreement “in accordance with customary rules of interpretation of public international law” (Article 3.2 of the DSU). The DSU, therefore, recognizes the need to clarify WTO rules and mandates that this clarification take place pursuant to customary rules of interpretation. In addition, Article 17.6 of the DSU implicitly recognizes that panels may develop legal interpretations. The “exclusive authority” of Article IX:2 of the WTO Agreement must therefore be understood as the possibility to adopt “authoritative” interpretations that are of general validity for all WTO Members — unlike interpretations by panels and the Appellate Body, which are applicable only to the parties and to the subject matter of a specific dispute. Accordingly, the DSU mandate to clarify WTO rules is without prejudice to the rights of Members to seek authoritative interpretations under Article IX:2 of the WTO Agreement (Article 3.9 of the DSU). As regards the methods of interpretation, the DSU refers to the “customary rules of interpretation of public international law” (Article 3.2 of the DSU). While customary international law is normally unwritten, there is an international convention that has codified some of these customary rules of treaty interpretation. Notably, Articles 31, 32 and 33 of the Vienna Convention on the Law of Treaties embody many of the customary rules of interpretation of public international law. While the reference in Article 3.2 of the DSU does not refer directly to these Articles, the Appellate Body has ruled that they can serve as a point of reference for discerning the applicable customary rules1.The three Articles read as follows:
As can be seen from these articles on treaty interpretation, the WTO Agreement is to be interpreted according to the ordinary meaning of the words in the relevant provision, viewed in their context and in the light of the object and purpose of the agreement. The ordinary meaning of a term in a provision is to be discerned on the basis of the plain text. The definitions given to this term in a dictionary can be of assistance in that purpose. “Context” refers to the kinds of conclusions that can be drawn on the basis of, for example, the structure, content or terminology in other provisions belonging to the same agreement, particularly the ones preceding and following the rule subject to interpretation. The “object and purpose” refers to the explicit or implicit objective of the rule in question or the agreement as a whole. In practice, panels and the Appellate Body seem to rely more on the ordinary meaning and on the context than on the object and purpose of the provisions to be interpreted. The negotiating history of the agreement is merely a subsidiary tool of interpretation (Article 32 of the Vienna Convention). This tool is to be used only as confirmation of the interpretation according to the ordinary meaning, context and object and purpose or if that interpretative result is ambiguous, obscure, manifestly absurd or unreasonable. One of the corollaries of the rules on interpretation is that meaning and effect must be given to all terms of an agreement, rather than reducing whole parts of an agreement to redundancy or inutility2 Conversely, the process of interpretation does not permit reading words into an agreement that are not there3. With respect to Article 33 of the Vienna Convention, the WTO Agreement is authentic in English, French and Spanish.
Notes: 1. Appellate Body Report, US Gasoline DSR 1996:I, 3 at p23, Appellate Body Report, Japan — Alcoholic Beverages II DSR 1996:I, 97 at p104 back to text 2. Appellate Body Report, US Gasoline DSR 1996:I, 3 at p23 back to text 3. Appellate Body Report, Computer Equipment para. 83 back to text
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