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THE POLITICS OF TRADE The Role of Research in Trade Policy and Negotiation Edited by Diana Tussie Republic of Letters/Brill/IDRC 2009 ISBN 978-90-04-17278-4 e-ISBN 978-1-55250-400-0 314 pp.
Drawing on internal political contexts and external influences on the policy process, this book illustrates the growing relevance of research in increasingly contested settings designed to support a particular cause. The rising era of post-paradigmatic wars in the field of international trade has narrowed ideological differences making policy more porous to independent research. But whose ideas matter? When? And how do actors make them matter? Why are some of the ideas that circulate in the research–policy arenas picked up and acted on, while others are ignored and disappear?’ Is demand-driven research most likely to effectively influence policy? The episodes of trade policy change and negotiations included in this volume show the growing relevance of commissioned research in increasingly contested settings designed from the beginning to support a particular cause-research not as independent truth waiting to be “hooked,” but as instrumental and supportive to policy decisions taken on other grounds. THE EDITOR Diana Tussie is Founding Director of the Latin American Trade Network, Director of the International Relations Department at FLACSO, the Latin American School of Social Sciences, and Senior Research Fellow at the National Council for Scientific and Technical Research (CONICET) in Argentina.
Acknowledgments Diana Tussie Buenos Aires-November 2008 2009 1. The Politics of Trade: The Role of Research in Trade Policy and Negotiations Diana Tussie 1 2009 Part 1: Paradigmatic shifts 2. Creation of values and principles: Canada’s experience with the CUSFTA and NAFTA Rafael Gomez and Morley Gunderson 1 2009 3. Creation of processes: sustainability impact assessments Clive George and Colin Kirkpatrick 1 2009 Part 2: Instrumental change, operational research 4. The case of Argentine research in the building of regional integration Mercedes Botto and Andrea Bianculli 2009 5. The adoption of the common external tariff in Nigeria Philip Osafo Kwaako and Kehinde Ajayi1 2009 Part 3: Understanding interests through research 6. Research uptake in an informal setting: The case of Egypt Ahmed Farouk Ghoneim1 2009 7. Research uptake in an institutionalized setting: The case of trade facilitation in India Abhijit Das 2009 Part 4: The WTO: The use of research for global coalition formation in trade negotiations 8. Multiple access points: Knowledge generation for the Group of 20 Amrita Narlikar and Diana Tussie1 (with the research assistance of Maria-Victoria Alvarez and Pablo Trucco) 2009 9. Centralized production: The Group of 33 Paul Mably 1 2009 Part 5: Understanding episodes: Is this a new world of post-academic research? 10. Understanding influence: The episode studies approach1 Fred Carden 2 2009 11. The other side of the equation: How policy influences research in the trade policy domain Susan Joekes 2009 Bibliography 2009 |
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