ABSTRACT

Faced with evolving trade and health dynamics, this book presents a historical, conceptual, and empirical examination of public health and medical procurement in international trade law at a time of emergency. The work argues that the current trade framework is outdated and must be redesigned to suit the new needs of the 21st century. It identifies critical problems within the current international trade system that prevents it from effectively responding to pandemics, as well as to the emerging digital economy. Based on the analysis, the study puts forward specific suggestions to upgrade the current trade rules framework to prepare for future international public health emergencies and further digitalization of health services. The book will be a valuable resource for academics, researchers and policy-makers working in the areas of International Trade Law, Public Health Law and Medical Law.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|10 pages

Rise of the medical trade dilemma

Pleading the trade system guilty

chapter 2|37 pages

Public health under the GATT/WTO system I

Product-borne health risks

chapter 3|34 pages

Public health under the GATT/WTO system II

Expanding the concept

chapter 4|33 pages

Medical trade and public health I

Existing rules

chapter 5|24 pages

Medical trade and public health II

New challenges

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion