Trade and investment are of paramount importance to achieve sustainable development thereby eradicating poverty. Developing countries were strongly arguing on this issue. Their argument emanates from the fact that the terms of trade between the developing and developed countries are unfair. All the developing countries realized that they needed the WTO to negotiate export market access particularly in highly protected sectors like agriculture and textiles, and to defend themselves against non-tariff protection from developed countries. The developing countries constitute for a four-fifths in the WTO, only a small minority are active in it. Weak participation in the WTO is largely a reflection and extension of policy-making deficits at home....
When the World Trade Organization (WTO) was founded ten years ago on January 1, 1995, commentators h...
This is an introduction to Fordham International Law Journal, Volume 29, Number 2. This book quite a...
Geography, international trade and institutions are often cited as reasons for the disparity in inco...
Trade and investment are of paramount importance to achieve sustainable development thereby eradicat...
About two thirds of the WTO’s around 150 members are developing countries. They play an increasingl...
There is a very strong consensus among economists that developing countries have the most to gain fr...
This article is an introduction to the Fordham International Law Journal, Volume 29, Number 2. The j...
This paper aims at providing an analytical examination of the criticism that the WTO is unfair and h...
This paper examines the existing literature on trade liberalisation and its effect on the economies ...
Despite recurring rounds of trade liberalization under GATT/WTO auspices, complemented by unilateral...
This article argues that "differential and more favourable treatment " of developing count...
In the 1960s and 1970s developing countries viewed UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade&Develo...
Abstract: This article discusses the structural and processional barriers facing developing countrie...
Produced by the Research Support Team The Policy Research Working Paper Series disseminates the find...
Underdevelopment of developing countries is in present one of the thorniest problems of the world. E...
When the World Trade Organization (WTO) was founded ten years ago on January 1, 1995, commentators h...
This is an introduction to Fordham International Law Journal, Volume 29, Number 2. This book quite a...
Geography, international trade and institutions are often cited as reasons for the disparity in inco...
Trade and investment are of paramount importance to achieve sustainable development thereby eradicat...
About two thirds of the WTO’s around 150 members are developing countries. They play an increasingl...
There is a very strong consensus among economists that developing countries have the most to gain fr...
This article is an introduction to the Fordham International Law Journal, Volume 29, Number 2. The j...
This paper aims at providing an analytical examination of the criticism that the WTO is unfair and h...
This paper examines the existing literature on trade liberalisation and its effect on the economies ...
Despite recurring rounds of trade liberalization under GATT/WTO auspices, complemented by unilateral...
This article argues that "differential and more favourable treatment " of developing count...
In the 1960s and 1970s developing countries viewed UNCTAD (United Nations Conference on Trade&Develo...
Abstract: This article discusses the structural and processional barriers facing developing countrie...
Produced by the Research Support Team The Policy Research Working Paper Series disseminates the find...
Underdevelopment of developing countries is in present one of the thorniest problems of the world. E...
When the World Trade Organization (WTO) was founded ten years ago on January 1, 1995, commentators h...
This is an introduction to Fordham International Law Journal, Volume 29, Number 2. This book quite a...
Geography, international trade and institutions are often cited as reasons for the disparity in inco...