Archival Digital Edition of the original 1998 article published in the Suffolk Transnational Law Review. This article examines the World Trade Organization Dispute Settlement Understanding (DSU) and argues for a stronger and more enduring implementation framework for the multilateral trading system. Developed during the 1995–1998 formative period and published at the start of the DSU/WTO tipping point, this article was one of the few very early statements of the broader promise and practical significance of an emerging “everything WTO / DSU” world. Methodologically, the article combined close reading, use, and analysis of the original DSU document and its text with validation through discussions, interviews, and contemporaneous practitioner, legal, diplomatic, and policy sources, including Ambassador Harlan Cleveland, U.S. Trade Representative leadership and context, and lawyers and leaders from other countries. Its relevance today is even clearer in hindsight: the WTO now has 166 members out of around 200 countries worldwide today, and its framework covers 98% of world trade. In that sense, the article addressed not a marginal mechanism, but the rise of a near-universal trade architecture with real enforcement teeth. In a different domain, the article also foreshadows a structural pattern that later appeared in the author’s MPEG work: not simply a narrow tool or doctrine, but a broader “all-in” framework that organizes many actors, inputs, rights, controls, and outcomes inside one operating system. In WTO/DSU, that meant a rules-based architecture with process, review, negotiation, settlement, and enforcement teeth. In the MPEG family, that meant a unifying standards-based structure spanning interactive media delivery (MPEG-4), content description and metadata (MPEG-7), and digital-item, rights, and network frameworks (MPEG-21). At a deeper level, the recurring logic involved object atomization, control abstraction, and high-intensity multimodality: building systems in which components could be separated, described, synchronized, protected, and recombined across channels, devices, and levels of interaction. The domains differ, but the structural rhyme is similar: broad integration, practical architecture, teaching and adoption across sectors, and influence that grows as legitimacy, use, and spine-level design converge. The paper was significantly shaped by interviews and discussions with Ambassador Harlan Cleveland, whose influence helped frame the article not simply as a technical legal discussion, but as part of a larger inquiry into governance, institutional durability, and the architecture of cooperation in a changing world order. At the same time, the article is grounded in active U.S. trade-policy realities of the period, including Mickey Kantor and Charlene Barshefsky’s testimony on the enforcement gap, which helped sharpen its focus on implementation, enforcement, and institutional credibility. In approach, balance, reach, and timing, the article stands as one of the few very early statements of the broader promise and practical significance of an emerging WTO/DSU order. It does not claim sole authorship of that trajectory, but it does stake a clear place in the momentum and articulation of a system that later became central to the conduct of global trade disputes and leverage. This is a historical work originally published in 1998 and republished in digital archival form in 2026 to preserve the original publication, restore access, support accurate citation, and document an early contribution to a framework that later became globally significant. As a historical work, it also helps illuminate an early phase in the formation, interpretation, and later dominance of the WTO/DSU framework, while pointing toward a broader pattern of systemic design and development that also appears in the author’s later work.
Jonathan Spierer (Thu,) studied this question.