Introduction and overview : China, India, and the international economic order / Muthucumaraswamy Sornarajah and Jiangyu Wang -- Pt. I. China, India and the global trade system -- The WTO and development policy in China and India / Joel P. Trachtman -- China, India and developing countries in the WTO : towards a pro-active strategy / Jianfu Chen -- China-India cooperation, South-South coalition, and the new international economic order : focus on the Doha Round / Chen An and Chen Huiping -- India, China and foreign investment / Muthucumaraswamy Sornarajah -- China, India, and WTO law / Julia Ya Qin -- China, India and the WTO dispute settlement system : towards an interpretative strategy / B. S. Chimni -- China, India and dispute settlement in the WTO and RTAs / Locknie Hsu -- China, India and global outsourcing of services under GATS / Dora S. Neo -- International dispute settlement : the Chinese approach and practice, and their implications / Kong Qingjiang -- Pt. II. China, India and regional economic integration in Asia --The role of China and India in Asian regionalism / Jiangyu Wang -- The Asian Economic Community : ASEAN a building or stumbling block for China and India economic cooperation? / Michael Ewing-Chow and Edrick Gao -- The China-ASEAN tariff acceleration clause / C. L. Lim -- Financial cooperation and integration in East Asia / Douglas W. Arner, Wei Wang, and Paul Lejot -- Pt. III. Law and development in China and India : domestic issues -- Law and development in China and India / Randall Peerenboom -- The development of modern corporate governance in China and India / Nicholas C. Howson and Vikramaditya S. Khanna -- An institutional race : a comparative study of competition law regimes in India and China / Zhang Xian-Chu.
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"With contributions by a variety of internationally distinguished scholars on international law, world trade, business law and development, this unique examination of the roles of China and India in the new world economy adopts the perspectives of international economic law and comparative law. The two countries are compared with respect to issues concerning trade and development, the World Trade Organization, international dispute settlement, regional/free trade agreements, outsourcing, international investment, foreign investment, corporate governance, competition law and policy, and law and development in general. The findings demonstrate that, though their domestic approaches to economic issues diverge, China and India adopt similar stances at the international level on many major issues, recapturing images which existed during the immediate post-colonial era. Cooperation between China and India could provide leadership in the struggle for economic development in developing countries"--