NGOs and Global Trade

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Author_Erin Hannah
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CETA
civil society influence on EU trade
Compulsory Licenses
constructivist theory
Cosmopolitanism
Dg Internal Market
Dg Trade
Dg Trade Official
Doha Declaration
Doha Round
epistemic communities
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Erin Hannah
EU Trade Policymaking
EU Trade Politics
EU's External Trade
EU's Negotiate Mandate
European Union
Foe International
global governance
Global Institutions
Global Trade Governance
International Ipr Regime
International Trade
International Trade Regime
IP Protection
Ipr Protection
Oxfam International
participatory democracy
policy advocacy
Policymaking
Produce Welfare Gains
social justice activism
Trade Policymaking
Trade Policymaking Process
Trip Agreement
Trips Council
TTIP Negotiation
Weiss
Wilkinson
WTO Member

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138477643
  • Weight: 240g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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In a deeply iniquitous world, where the gains from trade are distributed unevenly and where trade rules often militate against progressive social values, human health, and sustainable development, NGOs are widely touted as our best hope for redressing these conditions. As a critical voice of the poor and marginalized, many are engaged in a global struggle for democratic norms and social justice. Yet the potential for NGOs to bring about meaningful change is limited. This book examines whether improvements in participatory opportunities for progressive NGOs results in substantive and normative policy change in one of the major trading powers, the European Union.

Hannah advances a constructivist account of the role of NGOs in the EU’s trade policymaking process. She argues that NGOs have been instrumental in providing education, raising awareness, and giving a voice to broader societal concerns about proposed trade deals, both when they take advantage of formal participatory opportunities and when they protest from the streets and in the media. However, the book also highlights how NGO inputs are mediated by the social structure of global trade governance. Epistemes—the background knowledge, ideological and normative beliefs, and shared assumptions about how the world works—determine who has a voice in global trade governance.

Showing how NGOs succeed only when their advocacy conforms broadly to the dominant episteme, this book will be of value to scholars and students with an interest in NGOs and international trade negotiations. It will also be of interest to policymakers, national trade negotiators, government departments, and the trade policy community.

Erin Hannah is Associate Professor of Political Science at King’s University College at the University of Western Ontario, Canada. She is an international political economist specializing in global governance, trade, sustainable development, poverty and inequality, global civil society, and European Union trade politics. She has published articles in Journal of International Economic Law, Journal of Civil Society, Journal of World Trade, Politics, and Third World Quarterly. She is co-editor (with James Scott and Silke Trommer) of the book Expert Knowledge in Global Trade (Abingdon, Routledge, 2015).

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