FGV Digital Repository
    • português (Brasil)
    • English
    • español
      Visit:
    • FGV Digital Library
    • FGV Scientific Journals
  • English 
    • português (Brasil)
    • English
    • español
  • Login
View Item 
  •   DSpace Home
  • Produção Intelectual em Bases Externas
  • Documentos indexados pela Scopus
  • View Item
  •   DSpace Home
  • Produção Intelectual em Bases Externas
  • Documentos indexados pela Scopus
  • View Item
JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

Browse

All of DSpaceFGV Communities & CollectionsAuthorsAdvisorSubjectTitlesBy Issue DateKeywordsThis CollectionAuthorsAdvisorSubjectTitlesBy Issue DateKeywords

My Account

LoginRegister

Statistics

View Usage Statistics

Developmental responses to the international trade legal game: Cases of intellectual property and export credit law reforms in Brazil

Thumbnail
View/Open
2-s2.0-84924217187.pdf (328.3Kb)
Date
2011
Author
Badin, Michelle Ratton Sanchez
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
From Passive to Active Player in Two Decades This chapter examines two cases dealing with the interaction between WTO rules and domestic regulation in Brazil. By examining issues relating to intellectual property(IP) regulation and HIV policy, and to public arrangements for trade finance to the civil aircraft industry, it shows the interaction between global trade rules and national legislation as the country’s economic and political situation changed, and as development policy shifted. The two-decade period from 1990 to 2010 witnessed significant changes in the Brazilian economy and in the country’s development policies. Brazil, once among the largest external debtors in the international financial community in 1990 and considered an immature democracy at the time – the prototype of an untrustworthy economy for the world community – is currently one of the leading countries of the emerging economies and is playing an active role on the international governance scene. But we must remember that all this is very recent. Because of the deep economic and political crisis in the 1980s, the country entered the 1990s constrained by legal and economic choices prevailing at the time. These limitations led Brazil to accept the new WTO rules unqualifiedly. But as the economy stabilized, and development policies changed, tensions between these rules and emerging development strategies emerged and the nation began to take a hard look at the constraints. © Cambridge University Press 2013.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/10438/25620
Collections
  • Documentos indexados pela Scopus [664]
Knowledge Areas
Ciências sociais
Subject
Propriedade intelectual
Crédito para exportação
Keyword

DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 


DSpace software copyright © 2002-2016  DuraSpace
Contact Us | Send Feedback
Theme by 
@mire NV
 

 

Import Metadata