Dispute Settlement Reports 2015: Volume 6, Pages 3115–3564

Dispute Settlement Reports 2015: Volume 6, Pages 3115–3564

Author: World Trade Organization

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2016-12-08

Total Pages: 455

ISBN-13: 1108126340

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The Dispute Settlement Reports of the World Trade Organization (WTO) include Panel and Appellate Body reports, as well as arbitration awards, in disputes concerning the rights and obligations of WTO members under the provisions of the Marrakesh Agreement Establishing the World Trade Organization. These are the WTO authorized and paginated reports in English. An essential addition to the library of all practicing and academic trade lawyers and needed by students worldwide taking courses in international economic or trade law. DSR 2015: Volume 6 reports on Ukraine - Definitive Safeguard Measures on Certain Passenger Cars (WT/DS468) and Peru - Additional Duty on Imports of Certain Agricultural Products (WT/DS457).


Biological Control of Rice Diseases

Biological Control of Rice Diseases

Author: Samuel S. Gnanamanickam

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2009-07-14

Total Pages: 114

ISBN-13: 9048124654

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There is suf?cient need to document all the available data on biological control of rice diseases in a small volume. Part of this need rests on the global importance of rice to human life. In the ?rst chapter, I have tried to show that rice is indeed life for most people in Asia and shortages in production and availability can lead to a food crisis. While rice is cultivated in most continents, biological disease management attains special relevance to rice farmers of Africa, Asia, and also perhaps, Latin America. These farmers are resource-poor and might not be able to afford the cost of expensive chemical treatments to control devastating rice pathogens such as Magnaporthe oryzae (blast), Xanthomonas oryzae pv. oryzae (bacterial leaf blight), Rhizoctonia solani (sheath blight) and the virus, rice tungro disease. In an earlier volume that I developed under the title, Biological Control of Crop Diseases (Dekker/CRC Publishers, 2002), I included transgenic crops generated for the management of plant pathogens as biological control under the umbrella of a broad de?nition. Dr Jim Cook who wrote the Foreword for the volume lauded the inclusion of transgenic crops and induced systemic resistance (ISR) as a positive trend toward acceptance of host plant resistance as part of biocontrol. I continue to subscribe to this view.