Making Global Trade Governance Work for Development

Making Global Trade Governance Work for Development
Author: Carolyn Deere Birkbeck
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 711
Release: 2011-08-18
Genre: Law
ISBN: 1139499416

Discussion of the governance of global trade and the multilateral trading system is too often dominated by developed-country scholars and opinion-makers, with inadequate attention given to developing country perspectives. Making Global Trade Governance Work for Development gathers a diversity of developing country views on how to improve the governance of global trade and the WTO to better advance sustainable development and respond to the needs of developing countries. With contributions by senior scholars, commentators and practitioners, the essays combine new, empirically-grounded research with practical insights about the trade policy-making process. They consider the specific governance issues of interest to developing countries and acknowledge the changing dynamics in the global economy and in trade decision-making.

Making Global Trade Governance Work for Development

Making Global Trade Governance Work for Development
Author: Carolyn Deere-Birkbeck
Publisher:
Total Pages: 711
Release: 2014-05-14
Genre: LAW
ISBN: 9781139128438

A compilation of developing country perspectives on improving global trade governance and reforming the WTO to better promote development.

Development-oriented Perspectives on Global Trade Governance

Development-oriented Perspectives on Global Trade Governance
Author: Carolyn Deere-Birkbeck
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release: 2011
Genre:
ISBN:

Demand for global trade governance that supports development is high. Developing countries have long called for a greater role in governing the global economy and its trading system. As the importance of developing countries in global trade rises and South-South trade among them grows (UNCTAD 2010), they have stepped up their calls for a stronger say in the decision-making processes and institutions that impact how global trade is conducted and the way its rules are made, implemented and enforced have intensified. This paper shows that the way global trade is governed can facilitate or hinder the prospects for reaching rules and arrangements that benefit developing countries. The unique contribution of this volume is its compilation of a broad geographical spectrum of development-oriented views and proposals, and its engagement of scholars and of practitioners from government, international organizations and stakeholder groups. Together, the contributors provide concrete guidance on what a development agenda for global trade governance might include. They both reinforce and supplement development-oriented proposals already on the table.

Making Global Trade Work for People

Making Global Trade Work for People
Author: Kamal Malhotra
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 453
Release: 2012-03-29
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 113656196X

The world's trade regime is promoted by international agencies and most governments as the best way to lift the poor out of poverty and achieve sustainable development. But does it contribute to human development or not? This reassessment looks in detail at the way it has worked under the GATT and under the World Trade Organization, and analyses how it is working and how it can be improved. The book aims to make major contribution to the debates surrounding globalization and the impact of trade on the poor, on social stability and on the environment. It is intended to provide a benchmark for future policy discussion and analysis.

Power and the Governance of Global Trade

Power and the Governance of Global Trade
Author: Soo Yeon Kim
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Total Pages: 197
Release: 2010
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 0801459710

In Power and the Governance of Global Trade, Soo Yeon Kim analyzes the design, evolution, and economic impact of the global trade regime, focusing on the power politics that prevailed in the regime and shaped its distributive impact on global trade. Using documents now available from the archives of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT), Kim examines the institutional origins and critical turning points in the evolution of the GATT, as well as preferences of the lesser powers of the developing world that were the subject of heated debate over the International Trade Organization (ITO), which failed to materialize.Using quantitative analysis, Kim assesses the impact of the global trade regime on international trade and finds that the rules of trade forged by the great powers resulted in a developmental divide, in which industrialized countries benefited from trade expansion but developing countries reaped far fewer gains. The findings indicate that a successful conclusion to the Doha Round of the World Trade Organization (WTO) is urgently needed to mitigate the developmental divide by increasing trade between the industrialized and developing worlds.Kim offers a timely reading of the GATT/WTO system as a way to think about how trade and globalization more broadly may be governed in this post-Cold War century, as the global economy contends with a new geopolitical configuration featuring rising powers from the developing world. Important trading nations such as China, India, and other emergent actors in the G-20 countries, Kim argues, reflect the new power politics that will shape the course of global trade governance in the years to come.

The Shifting Landscape of Global Trade Governance

The Shifting Landscape of Global Trade Governance
Author: Manfred Elsig
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 447
Release: 2019-08-08
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1108485677

Takes stock of current challenges to the world trading system and develops scenarios for the future.

Making Global Trade Work for People

Making Global Trade Work for People
Author:
Publisher: Earthscan
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2003
Genre: Developing countries
ISBN: 1853839817

First Published in 2003. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.

Governing Global Trade

Governing Global Trade
Author: Theodore H. Cohn
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 327
Release: 2017-05-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1351932446

Cohn's topic of global trade is of enormous and proliferating interest. He provides a good background from 1945 to the present and on core contemporary themes such as civil society participation and the domesticisation of the trade agenda. Whilst there is a wealth of literature on policy-oriented aspects such as negotiating rounds, there are few that provide the careful, comprehensive historical overview that this work offers and none that do so with reference to international institutions such as the G7, Quad, OECD, and UNCTAD as well as the WTO in global trade governance. This seminal work has been awarded the British Columbia Political Science Association Weller Prize for 2003. Cohn's political science background will appeal directly to a university audience and a broader public policy market. It is also suitable for those interested in trade in the cognates of economics and law. This work's theoretical framework embraces and synthesises the major approaches in the field of international relations and will be appropriate for the dominant schools of realists and liberal institutionalists alike. It could therefore be apt for courses on international relations theory or international political economy taught in a theoretical mode. This book reinforces and broadens the focus of all previous works in The G8 and Global Governance series.

Writing Global Trade Governance

Writing Global Trade Governance
Author: Michael Strange
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2013-08-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1136022724

Writing Global Trade Governance operationalises a key post-structuralist methodology in order to expand understanding on the institution at the heart of the global political economy. Despite the WTO’s centrality and the growing popularity of methods utilizing discourse theory, no other text has yet demonstrated how these two fields of learning can be productively combined. The book seeks to move beyond existing literatures that assume the WTO to be a structure, institution or normative framework, in order to enquire into the discursive processes of identity formation that make the WTO both possible and contested. The book criticises conventional approaches that treat critical civil society as distinct to the WTO, arguing instead that it is only through including such social practices within the field of relations making the WTO that we can properly understand what makes the WTO work. The book presents an empirical analysis of the discursive character of the present-day WTO (including its formation and operation) and then moves on to evaluate how it is subject to change within a broader social context. The final stage of the book seeks to discuss the impact of the findings on future research, both on the WTO and other institutions. This work is a significant intervention in the literature on the World Trade Organization and the politics of global trade and social movements, and will be of great interest to students and scholars of global governance, discourse theory and international organizations