• 제목/요약/키워드: transitional nations

검색결과 2건 처리시간 0.014초

환동해권 지역사회의 상호의존과 견제: 제이행국가 접경지역의 대외경제교류 중심으로 (Interdependence and Check in East Sea Rim: Focused on Border Trade n Transitional Nations)

  • 최영진
    • 국제지역연구
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    • 제16권3호
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    • pp.293-321
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    • 2012
  • 본 연구는 환동해권 변경 지역에서 일어나는 대외경제 교류를 거시적인 구조와 미시적인 행위 간에 어떻게 제도가 형성되어 상호의존을 심화하기도 하거나 견제하는가에 대해 분석하고자 한다. 환동해권의 이행체제국가 지역과 시장경제국가 지역 간의 교역 거래 관할 구조에 대한 연구가 부재한 가운데 본 연구는 제도주의 경제학적 관점에서 이 문제를 다루고 있다. 또한, 환동해권 접경지역에 위치한 체제이행국가인 중국, 러시아, 북한은 무역의 관할 구조 측면에서 독특한 형태를 보이고 있다. 먼저, 중국 동북 3성은 아직 국유기업이 지역경제를 주도하는 가운데 제도경제의 기반 마련, 즉 변방무역통상구나 호시무역통상구를 통해 민간 무역의 활성화를 추구하는 혼합형 관할 구조를 형성하고 있다. 러시아 연해주도 수출은 원유, 가스 등을 주로 국영기업이 담당하고 생활용품 등의 수입은 민간업체나 호시무역상들이 주도하는 혼합형 관할 구조를 이루면서 비공식 사회 네트워크가 동시에 작동한다. 한편, 북한은 주로 국가 기관의 허가에 의해 교역이 이루어지는 위계형 관할 구조가 형성되어 있어 이들 국가 간의 교역 관할 구조의 비교는 시장경제권의 한국과 일본과는 매우 다른 양상을 보이고 있다. 환동해권 지역 및 국가 간의 무역에 대한 주체와 영향력의 변화는 신제도주의 경제학의 설명력이 높은 것으로 보인다. 그럼에도 러시아의 경우, 제도 시행에는 문제가 있어 향후 전산화나 WTO의 가입이 투명하고 효율적인 제도 운영에 긍정적인 영향을 미칠 것이다.

국제항공법상 화물.수하물에 대한 운송인의 책임상한제도 - 미국의 판례 분석을 중심으로 - (The Limitation of Air Carriers' Cargo and Baggage Liability in International Aviation Law: With Reference to the U.S. Courts' Decisions)

  • 문준조
    • 항공우주정책ㆍ법학회지
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    • 제22권2호
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    • pp.109-133
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    • 2007
  • The legal labyrinth through which we have just walked is one in which even a highly proficient lawyer could easily become lost. Warsaw Convention's original objective of uniformity of private international aviation liability law has been eroded as the world community ha attempted again to address perceived problems. Efforts to create simplicity and certainty of recovery actually may have created less of both. In any particular case, the issue of which international convention, intercarrier agreement or national law to apply will likely be inconsistent with other decisions. The law has evolved faster for some nations, and slower for others. Under the Warsaw Convention of 1929, strict liability is imposed on the air carrier for damage, loss, or destruction of cargo, luggage, or goods sustained either: (1) during carriage in air, which is comprised of the period during which cargo is 'in charge of the carrier (a) within an aerodrome, (b) on board the aircraft, or (c) in any place if the aircraft lands outside an aerodrome; or (2) as a result of delay. By 2007, 151 nations had ratified the original Warsaw Convention, 136 nations had ratified the Hague Protocol, 84 had ratified the Guadalajara Protocol, and 53 nations had ratified Montreal Protocol No.4, all of which have entered into force. In November 2003, the Montreal Convention of 1999 entered into force. Several airlines have embraced the Montreal Agreement or the IATA Intercarrier Agreements. Only seven nations had ratified the moribund Guatemala City Protocol. Meanwhile, the highly influential U.S. Second Circuit has rendered an opinion that no treaty on the subject was in force at all unless both affected nations had ratified the identical convention, leaving some cases to fall between the cracks into the arena of common law. Moreover, in the United States, a surface transportation movement prior or subsequent to the air movement may, depending upon the facts, be subject to Warsaw, or to common law. At present, International private air law regime can be described as a "situation of utter chaos" in which "even legal advisers and judges are confused." The net result of this barnacle-like layering of international and domestic rules, standards, agreements, and criteria in the elimination of legal simplicity and the substitution in its stead of complexity and commercial uncertainty, which manifestly can not inure to the efficient and economical flow of world trade. All this makes a strong case for universal ratification of the Montreal Convention, which will supersede the Warsaw Convention and its various reformulations. Now that the Montreal Convention has entered into force, the insurance community may press the airlines to embrace it, which in turn may encourage the world's governments to ratify it. Under the Montreal Convention, the common law defence is available to the carrier even when it was not the sole cause of the loss or damage, again making way for the application of comparative fault principle. Hopefully, the recent entry into force of the Montreal Convention of 1999 will re-establish the international legal uniformity the Warsaw Convention of 1929 sought to achieve, though far a transitional period at least, the courts of different nations will be applying different legal regimes.

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