The Precautionary Principle and/or Risk Assessment in World Trade Organization Decisions: A Possible Role for Risk Perception
- 13 April 2004
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Risk Analysis
- Vol. 24 (2) , 491-499
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.0272-4332.2004.00452.x
Abstract
Risk analysis has been recognized and validated in World Trade Organization (WTO) decision processes. In recent years the precautionary principle has been proposed as an additional or alternative approach to standard risk assessment. The precautionary principle has also been advocated by some who see it as part of postmodern democracy in which more power is given to the public on health and safety matters relative to the judgments of technocrats. A more cynical view is that the precautionary principle is particularly championed by the European Community as a means to erect trade barriers. The WTO ruling against the European Community's trade barrier against beef from hormone-treated cattle seemed to support the use of risk assessment and appeared to reject the argument that the precautionary principle was a legitimate basis for trade barriers. However, a more recent WTO decision on asbestos contains language suggesting that the precautionary principle, in the form of taking into account public perception, may be acceptable as a basis for a trade barrier. This decision, if followed in future WTO trade disputes, such as for genetically modified foods, raises many issues central to the field of risk analysis. It is too early to tell whether the precautionary principle will become accepted in WTO decisions, either as a supplement or a substitute for standard risk assessment. But it would undermine the value of the precautionary principle if this principle were misused to justify unwarranted trade barriers.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Precautionary Principle and its Policy ImplicationsJCMS: Journal of Common Market Studies, 2002
- The precautionary principle in environmental science.Environmental Health Perspectives, 2001
- The Changing Character of Regulation: A Comparison of Europe and the United StatesRisk Analysis, 2001
- Book Review: Making Better Environmental DecisionsPublic Health Reports®, 2001
- Trade and the Environment: A Critical Assessment and Some Suggestions for ReconciliationThe Journal of Environment & Development, 2000
- Democracy, Science, and Free Trade: Risk Regulation on Trial at the World Trade OrganizationMichigan Law Review, 2000
- Risk Perception and CommunicationAnnual Review of Public Health, 1993
- Risk Management as a Postnormal Science2Risk Analysis, 1992
- Risk management for global environmental changeGlobal Environmental Change, 1991
- Perception of RiskScience, 1987