My chic strategy of providing links
Looking for more on the global southern strategy? Look no further! Previous posts: my round-up on the World Summit on the Information Society can be found here and here. My post on FTAA “lite” is here. Documentation: The Fischler quote comes from this story in the Guardian. The Goldman Sachs study mentioned in the piece ...
Looking for more on the global southern strategy? Look no further! Previous posts: my round-up on the World Summit on the Information Society can be found here and here. My post on FTAA "lite" is here. Documentation: The Fischler quote comes from this story in the Guardian. The Goldman Sachs study mentioned in the piece is available online. Here's a link to the joint IMF-World Bank-WTO statement. For good measure here's a follow-up joint Bank-Fund statement post-Cancun. Background: For more info on the old-school New International Economic Order, check out this entry in the Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy. On the developed country response, the best source is Stephen D. Krasner's Structural Conflict, about which I've posted previously. For more on the G22/G20+, there's this story. Another piece by the same journalist in the Asian Times provides further background on the emergent grouping. I discussed developing country opposition to the "Singapore issues" in the WTO talks in a Tech Central Station column. For a mildly contrary take, Jeffrey Schott provides engaging analysis of the post-Cancun state of negotiations.
Looking for more on the global southern strategy? Look no further! Previous posts: my round-up on the World Summit on the Information Society can be found here and here. My post on FTAA “lite” is here. Documentation: The Fischler quote comes from this story in the Guardian. The Goldman Sachs study mentioned in the piece is available online. Here’s a link to the joint IMF-World Bank-WTO statement. For good measure here’s a follow-up joint Bank-Fund statement post-Cancun. Background: For more info on the old-school New International Economic Order, check out this entry in the Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy. On the developed country response, the best source is Stephen D. Krasner’s Structural Conflict, about which I’ve posted previously. For more on the G22/G20+, there’s this story. Another piece by the same journalist in the Asian Times provides further background on the emergent grouping. I discussed developing country opposition to the “Singapore issues” in the WTO talks in a Tech Central Station column. For a mildly contrary take, Jeffrey Schott provides engaging analysis of the post-Cancun state of negotiations.
Daniel W. Drezner is a professor of international politics at the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy at Tufts University and co-host of the Space the Nation podcast. Twitter: @dandrezner
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