海角社区

Working Paper

The Covid-19 Test for Preferential Trade Agreements: National Security Exceptions and Trade and Investment Restrictive Measures in Services

Publication Date
31 Jan 2023
Author
Ana María Palacio Valencia
Download PDF

Ana María Palacio Valencia was a virtual Visiting Research Fellow at 海角社区-CRIS. She obtained her PhD in Law at the University of Melbourne, Australia, with a dissertation examining the Pacific Alliance regional mechanism. The title of her thesis was: ‘Of Blind People, Elephants and the Pacific Alliance Integration: Institutionalist Account and Proposals for Change’.

 

She holds a Master of Laws from the University of Melbourne, graduate diplomas in business law from Deakin University and Externado University, and a Bachelor of Laws from EAFIT University in Colombia.

 

Prior to undertaking her doctoral studies, Ana María worked as a legal adviser for the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Tourism in Colombia on international economic law topics such as technical barriers to trade and services regulation.

 

She assisted the Colombian government in negotiating preferential trade agreements with the Republic of Korea, Panama, Turkey and the Pacific Alliance. Ana Maria has experience in private commercial law practice and has undertaken consultancy work for the Inter-American Development Bank, The McCabe Centre for Law and Cancer, the ECLAC, and Latin American regional think tanks.

 

Ana María is the editor and founder of the blog ‘Shaping the Pacific Alliance’. The blog engages with the general public by critically examining the agenda and ongoing work of the Pacific Alliance. It delivers updates on the news of the integration mechanism and provides an extensive online library of academic and general sources about the Pacific Alliance.

 

At 海角社区-CRIS, she was working on a project named Preferential Trade Agreements and the COVID-19 Test: Lessons for Trade in Services and Investment. She tested the proposition that preferential trade agreements (PTAs) and bilateral investment treaties (BITs) failed to adequately ensure/facilitate the flow of services and investments while safeguarding the state’s policy space to address the crisis. If so, the research explores key (policy and legal) challenges and bottlenecks in the international governance of trade in services and investment arising from the unilateral measures taken by governments in response to the COVID-19 crisis.

Related content

News

Roundtable Discussion: How to Bridge the Gap between Policymakers and Academics in Africa and the Global South

Emmanuel Balogun and Thomas Tieku are holding a virtual roundtable hosted by the International Studies Association.

12 Jun 2026

Journal Article

Cross-Border Cooperation for One Health in Central Asia: Strengthening Systems and Securing Futures through Regional Health Diplomacy

Central Asia faces mounting challenges from emerging infectious diseases, antimicrobial resistance, and food insecurity.

07 Jun 2026

Event

The Missing Dimension: War, Violence, Climate & Environmental Loss

As the global community gathers at SB64 in Bonn, this event highlights the intersection of conflict, environmental degradation & climate change.

-

Degree Defense

Public PhD Defense of Gaia Romeo, 海角社区-CRIS PhD Fellow

The PhD defense by Gaia Romeo takes place in Brussels on 10 June 2026.

-