Human Rights

Trade Imbalance The Struggle to Weigh Human Rights Concerns in Trade Policymaking

Edited by Aaronson Susan Ariel · Jamie M. Zimmerman
Cambridge University Press November 2007

Specifications

ISBN-13
9780521694209
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Publication
November 2007
Format
Paperback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

In many countries, citizens allege that trade policies undermine specific rights such as labor rights, the right to health, or the right to political participation. However, in some countries, policy makers use trade policies to promote human rights. Although scholars, policy makers and activists have long debated this relationship, in truth we know very little about it. This book enters this murky territory with three goals. First, it aims to provide readers with greater insights into the relationship between human rights and trade. Second, it includes the first study of how South Africa, Brazil, the United States, and the European Union coordinate trade and human rights objectives and resolve conflicts. It also looks at how human rights issues are seeping into the WTO. Finally, it provides suggestions to policy makers for making their trade and human rights policies more coherent.

  • Breaks new ground by looking at the behaviour of policy-makers at the intersection of trade and human rights
  • Provides useful recommendations for policy-makers on how to pursue policies that achieve goals for both trade and human rights
  • Uses case study to describe dilemmas that governments face and suggests how they can work to promote human rights at home and/or abroad

Table of Contents

Contents:
Foreword; Preface and acknowledgments;
1. Introduction;
2. The World Trade Organization and human rights;
3. South Africa;
4. Brazil;
5. European Union;
6. United States
7. Conclusion and recommendations; Appendix: interviews.
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