Description

Book Synopsis
International agricultural trade regulation remains problematic despite the creation of the WTO and a specific Agreement on Agriculture in 1995. Fiona Smith challenges this orthodoxy and presents a new conceptual method by which the problem of international agricultural trade in the WTO can be understood.

Attempts to revise the rules in the Doha Development Round of multilateral trade talks have repeatedly stalled as negotiators grapple with what is perceived to be the problem of international agricultural trade. Issues such as how best to address the contemporary challenges to market liberalisation whilst preserving the environment, difficulties of biofuels, development, human rights and the demands of the changing nature of global governance are all examined in this timely book.

Challenging convention and introducing new concepts, Agriculture and the WTO will strongly appeal to academics working in the fields of international agricultural trade, international relations, international economic law, agriculture law and policy. It will also be warmly welcomed by policymakers and graduate students with a special interest in international agricultural trade.



Trade Review
'This is an insightful book of ideas offering an alternative conceptualisation of the problems of international agricultural trade, which are seen as polycentric and so must be managed rather than resolved. It demonstrates that where there is convergence without genuine agreement on the meaning no specific resolution can be achieved. The author is to be commended for offering a valuable springboard for further reflection on the management of the problems of international agricultural trade.' -- Joseph McMahon, University College Dublin, Ireland

Table of Contents
Contents: Preface 1. International Agricultural Trade Regulation: Charting the Landscape 2. Current Perceptions of the Problem 3. Two Models of Disagreement 4. Polycentrism and the Issue of Market Access 5. Cultural Divergence, Polycentricity and Subsidies 6. Towards the Future Index

Agriculture and the WTO: Towards a New Theory of

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A Hardback by Fiona Smith

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    View other formats and editions of Agriculture and the WTO: Towards a New Theory of by Fiona Smith

    Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
    Publication Date: 30/07/2009
    ISBN13: 9781845424909, 978-1845424909
    ISBN10: 1845424905

    Description

    Book Synopsis
    International agricultural trade regulation remains problematic despite the creation of the WTO and a specific Agreement on Agriculture in 1995. Fiona Smith challenges this orthodoxy and presents a new conceptual method by which the problem of international agricultural trade in the WTO can be understood.

    Attempts to revise the rules in the Doha Development Round of multilateral trade talks have repeatedly stalled as negotiators grapple with what is perceived to be the problem of international agricultural trade. Issues such as how best to address the contemporary challenges to market liberalisation whilst preserving the environment, difficulties of biofuels, development, human rights and the demands of the changing nature of global governance are all examined in this timely book.

    Challenging convention and introducing new concepts, Agriculture and the WTO will strongly appeal to academics working in the fields of international agricultural trade, international relations, international economic law, agriculture law and policy. It will also be warmly welcomed by policymakers and graduate students with a special interest in international agricultural trade.



    Trade Review
    'This is an insightful book of ideas offering an alternative conceptualisation of the problems of international agricultural trade, which are seen as polycentric and so must be managed rather than resolved. It demonstrates that where there is convergence without genuine agreement on the meaning no specific resolution can be achieved. The author is to be commended for offering a valuable springboard for further reflection on the management of the problems of international agricultural trade.' -- Joseph McMahon, University College Dublin, Ireland

    Table of Contents
    Contents: Preface 1. International Agricultural Trade Regulation: Charting the Landscape 2. Current Perceptions of the Problem 3. Two Models of Disagreement 4. Polycentrism and the Issue of Market Access 5. Cultural Divergence, Polycentricity and Subsidies 6. Towards the Future Index

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