Available open access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence.
Although non-communicable diseases (NCDs) such as cancers, diabetes, and heart diseases are preventable, they have risen dramatically over the last 30 years. This is in part due to increased international trade and foreign direct investment in the tobacco, alcohol and food industries.
As governments attempt to regulate these industries, this book raises important and timely questions about the relationship between public health and international trade and investment law.
Providing a clear and succinct analysis of the relevant trade and investment regimes and the obligations they impose, this book identifies the key principles that must be considered when formulating and implementing NCD prevention strategies that are both effective and able to withstand legal challenges.
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1. Setting the Scene: The Health and Trade Nexus
2. How Trade & Investment Law Can Be Used to Challenge Public Health Measures
3. Introducing the International Trade and Investment Regime: Rationale, Actors, and Institutions
4. The Principle of Non-discrimination
5. The Principle of Necessity
6. The Principle of Predictability
7. The Protection of Intellectual Property Rights and the Prevention of NCDs
8. Presenting NCD Prevention Measures: The Evidence Base
9. Conclusion
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Gregory Messenger is Professor of Trade Law & Policy at the University of Bristol and Co-Director of the Trade & Public Policy (Ta PP) Network.