Greening Trade and Investment: Environmental Protection Without Protectionism

Front Cover
Earthscan, 2001 - 228 pages
A comprehensive, critical analysis of the interactions between investment, trade and the environment. It examines the consequences of existing multilateral investment and trade regimes, including the WTO and the MAI for the environment, and asks how they should be reformed to protect it. In doing so, the text shows how these regimes can be greened without erecting protectionist barriers to trade that frustrate the development aspirations of poorer countries. The solution seeks to offer a way out of one of the most difficult dilemmas in international policy: how investment and trade can protect the environment without encouraging protectionism by the industrialized world.

From inside the book

Contents

Foundations
1
The Current Multilateral Trade and Investment Regimes
25
Investment
39
Do Developed Countries Fail to Raise
68
Do Foreign Investors Use InvestortoState Dispute
79
The Failed Attempt to Conclude a Multilateral
91
78
101
viii
224
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2001)

Eric Neumayer is lecturer in environment and development at the London School of Economics.

Bibliographic information