International trade and developing countries : bargaining coalitions in the GATT & WTO
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
International trade and developing countries : bargaining coalitions in the GATT & WTO
(RIPE series in global political economy, 13)
Routledge, 2003
- : pbk
Available at / 27 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
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University Library for Agricultural and Life Sciences, The University of Tokyo図
678.3:N525010224490
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [222]-234) and index
Description and Table of Contents
- Volume
-
ISBN 9780415318594
Description
A keen analysis of how and why countries bargain together in groups in world affairs, and why such coalitions are crucial to individual developing nations. It also reveals the effects these negotiating blocs are having on world affairs.
Successful coalition building has proven to be a difficult and expensive process. Allies are often not obvious and need to be carefully identified. Large numbers do not necessarily entail a proportionate increase in influence. And the weak have the choice of teaming up against or jumping on the bandwagon with the strong. Even after it has been organised, collective action entails costs of many kinds.
This book investigates the relevance and workability of coalitions as instruments of bargaining power for the weak. More specifically, this analyzes the coalition strategies of developing countries at the inter-state level, particularly in the context of international trade.
Given the nature of this enquiry, this new study uses theoretical and empirical methods to complement each other. The theoretical approach draws from a plethora of writings: formal theories of clubs and coalitions, theories of domestic political economy and theories of international relations. The empirical analysis of comparable coalitions becomes necessary to assist in this theorising, so the greater part of the book focuses mainly (though not exclusively) on coalitions involving developing countries on the issue-area of trade in services. Through the case-studies of the Uruguay Round and an analytical overview of more recent coalitions, this text fills an important gap in the literature of international political economy and international relations where most GATT/WTO-based coalitions have eluded record.
This book will be of great interest to all students of international relations, politics and globalization.
Table of Contents
Introduction: Bargaining Together: Why and How? Coalitions in the GATT and the Entry of Services 1. Bloc Diplomacy: The Informal Group and the G-10 2. Alliance Diplomacy: The Issue-Based, Crossover Coalitions of G-20 and Cafe au Lait 3. Combination Diplomacy: Issue-Based Blocs and Sub-Sectoral Crossover Coalitions 4. Evolved Alliances: The Cairns Group and Chapter 5. Friends of Services Group 6. Regionalism: A Springboard for Bargaining? 7. Coalitions of the New Round: Developing Countries 8. At Seattle and Doha 9. Conclusion Bibliography
- Volume
-
: pbk ISBN 9780415375351
Description
How and why do countries bargain together in world affairs? Why are such coalitions crucial to developing nations? What effects do these blocs have on world affairs?
This new study asks and answers these key questions, showing why successful coalition building is a difficult and expensive process: allies need to be carefully identified, large numbers do not always mean a proportionate increase in influence. The weak have the choice of teaming up against or jumping on the bandwagon with the strong. Even after it has been organized, collective action entails costs of many kinds.
This book also investigates the relevance and workability of coalitions as an instrument of bargaining power for the weak. More specifically, it analyzes the coalition strategies of developing countries at the inter-state level, particularly in the context of international trade.
Given the nature of this enquiry, this new study uses theoretical and empirical methods to complement each other. Through new case-studies of the Uruguay Round and an analytical overview of more recent coalitions, this is an important contribution to international political economy and international relations, where most GATT/WTO-based coalitions have eluded record.
This book will be of great interest to all students of international relations, politics and globalization.
Table of Contents
Introduction 1. Bargaining Together: Why and How? 2. Coalitions in the GATT and the Entry of Services 3. Bloc Diplomacy: The Informal Group and the G-10 4. Alliance Diplomacy: The Issue-Based, Crossover Coalitions of G-20 and Cafe au Lait 5. Combination Diplomacy: Issue-Based Blocs and Sub-Sectoral Crossover Coalitions 6. Evolved Alliances: The Cairns Group and Friends of Services Group 7. Regionalism: A Springboard for Bargaining? 8. Coalitions of the New Round: Developing Countries at Seattle and Doha 9. Conclusion
by "Nielsen BookData"