Source: Carnegie
POLITICS AND PARALLEL NEGOTIATIONS
Environment and Trade in the Western Hemisphere
John Audley
Edward Sherwin
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SUMMARY
IN DECEMBER 1994, at the behest of then–U.S. president Bill Clinton, the leaders of the 34 Western Hemisphere democracies convened in Miami for the first comprehensive hemispheric summit in more than 25 years. The assembled heads of state pledged that their countries would forge a path toward regional integration based on four overarching principles: Governments should build strong democratic institutions, prosperity should be promoted through free trade and economic cooperation, poverty and discrimination should be eliminated, and the natural environment should be preserved through policies promoting sustainable development. Seven and a half years later, the promise of that first Summit of the Americas has only partly been realized. The 34 governments have made substantial progress on their second goal—economic integration—through negotiations on the Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA), which is expected to go into effect in 2005. However, they have accomplished little in the name of sustainable development.
This new working paper describes the dual challenges of building economies
and protecting the environment. John Audley and Edward Sherwin demonstrate how
political pressures in industrial and developing countries force linkages between
efforts to achieve both objectives simultaneously, and conclude with a prescription
for policy makers that addresses the environment and development needs of the
hemisphere's countries by giving new mandates to existing multilateral institutions.
About the Authors
John Audley is senior associate at the Carnegie Endowment and director
of the its Trade,
Environment, and Development Project. He is the author of A
Greener Fast Track: Putting Environmental Protection on the Trade Agenda
(Carnegie Endowment Working Paper No. 22) and coauthor of Overhauling
the WTO: Opportunity at Doha and Beyond (Carnegie Endowment Policy Brief
No. 6).
Edward Sherwin is a junior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment, working on both the Trade, Environment, and Development and the Public Role for the Private Sector projects. He will be attending Harvard Law School in Fall 2002.
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