Civil society participation in trade policy-making in Latin America: The Case of the Environmental Movement

Abstract

By comparing the documented experiences of NAFTA with analysis of Mercosur and the evolving FTAA negotiations, in terms of the participation of the environmental movements, important insights may be gained about: who is participating in trade policy, how and with what effect and, equally importantly, who is not participating and what are the implications of this? By comparing across different sets of trade negotiations and institutional arrangements this paper discusses what the key drivers and shapers of change appear to be. In other words, the extent to which these appear to derive from the nature of the institution or process itself, the strategies of the movement engaging with it, or more likely still, some combination of both these elements. The challenge is to account for diverse forms of engagement and non-engagement and, more importantly, to derive lessons from them about the possibility of constructing more effective, sustainable and transparent mechanisms of participation and representation in trade policy based on experiences to date in Latin America.

Citation

CSGR Working Paper No. 201/06, Warwick University, UK. 58 pp.

Civil society participation in trade policy-making in Latin America: The Case of the Environmental Movement

Updates to this page

Published 1 January 2006