Abstract

In this chapter, more precise examination of interests involved in the WTO shows the existence of common interests that supply not only the Organization in institutional sense, but also the right that it accomodates. The analysis of conventional techniques implemented in the WTO reveals multilateral nature of substantial obligations. However, what is meant to be qualified of common interest, worthy of protection, calls to be clarified, and the WTO testifies the presence of prominent mutual interest, on which the conception of Organization rests and what it has chosen to legally protect. In the fact that it is not more disputed than the international obligations to which states committed can be of bilateral or multilateral nature, but the distinction appeared only gradually and was the object of successive refinements, there are so many tools for analysis of issue of obligations to WTO. The original text of the chapter is in French.Keywords: common interest; multilateral nature; prominent mutual interest; substantial obligations; WTO

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