Global trade negotiations for the acceleration of a multilateral trading system are a sine-quo-non for all the countries of the world. The WTO was established for this very purpose. However, rigidities in both attitude and approach caused the Cancun meet to collapse and the global trading system to come into danger. Against this backdrop, the present paper analyses the reasons and causes of the collapse of the Cancun meet, including a discussion of the role of developed and developing nations. It also asks what should have been the agenda at Cancun
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Trade minister...
International audienceThe 5th WTO Conference in Cancun was a failure, both for the process of global...
"International trade increases worldwide growth and improves the chances of successful poverty reduc...
Some of the main objectives of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are, to raise the standards of liv...
This article offers an analysis of the collapse of the WTO talks in Cancun in September 2003. It arg...
The failure of the WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancun has generated more fears that hopes for the ...
reaching a consensus. According to press reports and subsequent statements by those present at that ...
The World Trade Organization's (WTO) 2003 meeting in Cancun, Mexico, which collapsed in acrimony, ca...
Failures of substance are often driven by failures in process. Admittedly, the proximate causes for ...
The collapse of the September 2003 Ministerial Conference held by the World Trade Organization (WT0)...
This article is intended to contribute to the process of diagnosis and prescription in response to t...
The September World Bank paper 'Cancun: Crisis or Catharsis' sets out the importance ...
The launch of a new trade round in Doha in November 2001 was a major breakthrough following the disc...
Rorden Wilkinson explores the factors behind the collapse of World Trade Organisation (WTO) minister...
This article presents an analysis of the Gatt/Wto North-South debate the from the Uruguay round to C...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Trade minister...
International audienceThe 5th WTO Conference in Cancun was a failure, both for the process of global...
"International trade increases worldwide growth and improves the chances of successful poverty reduc...
Some of the main objectives of the World Trade Organization (WTO) are, to raise the standards of liv...
This article offers an analysis of the collapse of the WTO talks in Cancun in September 2003. It arg...
The failure of the WTO Ministerial Conference in Cancun has generated more fears that hopes for the ...
reaching a consensus. According to press reports and subsequent statements by those present at that ...
The World Trade Organization's (WTO) 2003 meeting in Cancun, Mexico, which collapsed in acrimony, ca...
Failures of substance are often driven by failures in process. Admittedly, the proximate causes for ...
The collapse of the September 2003 Ministerial Conference held by the World Trade Organization (WT0)...
This article is intended to contribute to the process of diagnosis and prescription in response to t...
The September World Bank paper 'Cancun: Crisis or Catharsis' sets out the importance ...
The launch of a new trade round in Doha in November 2001 was a major breakthrough following the disc...
Rorden Wilkinson explores the factors behind the collapse of World Trade Organisation (WTO) minister...
This article presents an analysis of the Gatt/Wto North-South debate the from the Uruguay round to C...
A letter report issued by the General Accounting Office with an abstract that begins "Trade minister...
International audienceThe 5th WTO Conference in Cancun was a failure, both for the process of global...
"International trade increases worldwide growth and improves the chances of successful poverty reduc...