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Høst 2024
JUR-3602 Introduction to International and EU Trade Law - 15 stp
The course is administrated by
Type of course
Course overlap
Course contents
This course offers an introduction to International and EU Trade Law encompassing a general overview of both legal frameworks, and a more specific focus on selected key substantive and procedural law topics. Furthermore, the course intends to enable the participating students to understand, evaluate and to compare the main similarities and differences between WTO and EU trade law.
In respect of International Trade Law, the course first offers a brief overview of International Trade Law as a whole, but subsequently focuses exclusively on the World Trade Organization (WTO). Within the WTO framework, the course focuses particularly on the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT 1994), on the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS), and on the Understanding on Rules and Procedures Governing the Settlement of Disputes (DSU). Consequently, topics discussed in the course include issues on market access, tariff and non-tariff barriers to trade, non-discrimination (national treatment and most-favoured-nation treatment), general and security exceptions, and settlement of disputes.
In respect of EU trade law, the course covers, firstly, a brief historical background of EU Law and the key EU institutions. Furthermore, the course focuses on the conferral and division of competences between Member States and the EU. Subsequently, the course delves into the essence of the leading principles and remedies in place that ensure that EU Law is made into an effective legal system. Lastly, the course gives an introduction to an essential element of the substantive law of the EU, namely how the free movement of goods, persons and services is accomplished within the Union.
Admission requirements
Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree of at least 180 ECTS credits, comprising or in combination with at least 80 ECTS credits in legal studies.
Admitted students should have basic knowledge of EU law and public international law.
Students at the Integrated master´s degree programme in law may choose this course as a partial fulfilment of the requirements for the elective part of the programme's fifth year, cf. Programme Specification for the Master's Degree in Jurisprudence at the University of Tromsø (Studieplan for graden Master i rettsvitenskap ved Universitetet i Tromsø). Students in the programme's fouth year must have completed and passed compulsory practice on the master's in jurisprudence to be able to complete the course in the autumn semester.
For information about the application process, please visit the web-pagesof the UiT Admissions office.
Objective of the course
Knowledge:
Having passed the exam, the student shall have acquired:
- General knowledge of international trade law as a whole;
- General knowledge of the origins, structure, and functioning of the WTO;
- General knowledge of the Uruguay Round Agreements;
- Advanced knowledge of the basic rules of the GATT 1994;
- Advanced knowledge of the basic rules of the GATS;
- Knowledge of the DSU;
- General knowledge of the history of the EU and its institutions;
- General knowledge of how power is transferred from Member States to the EU and how competences are divided between Member States and EU institutions;
- General knowledge of the supremacy of EU Law and the means employed to ensure the effectiveness of the EU legal system;
- Advanced knowledge of free movement of goods within the EU Internal Market;
- Advanced knowledge of free movement of persons and services within the EU; Internal Market
Skills:
Having passed the exam, the student is able to:
- Identify and analyze legal problems of both theoretical and practical character within international and EU trade;
- Apply knowledge gained of International and EU Trade Law in a critical and independent way;
- Identify and discuss limitations of the current law;
- Construct and communicate legal reasoning, orally and in writing, in a clear and precise manner.
General Competence:
Having passed the exam, the student is able to:
- Apply the knowledge and skills obtained in the field of International and EU Trade Law individually and in cooperation with others;
- Communicate reasoning within the fields of International and EU Trade Law in a clear and precise manner, orally and in writing to the academic community and the general public;
- Identify and reflect on ethical dilemmas that may arise within International and EU Trade Law and deal with these in a responsible manner;
- Master the English language and terminology within the fields of International and EU Trade Law;
- Apply knowledge and skills acquired within International and EU Trade Law to research projects, legal counseling, and other tasks in their future careers.
- Make comparisons and to single out basic similarities and differences between the WTO and EU legal systems