Synopses & Reviews
Attention to environmental issues is vital if the full potential economic benefits of international trade are to be realized. Greening the Americas offers a number of analytically rigorous proposals to ensure that economic integration in the Western Hemisphere proceeds in an environmentally sustainable and politically sensible manner.The chapters review the history of the environmental negotiations of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), explore the treaty's economic and environmental impacts, and draw lessons that can be applied to the ongoing Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) negotiations. Greening the Americas analyzes in detail NAFTA's environmental elements, highlighting those provisions that should be included in future agreements and those that should be amended or dropped. The book includes contributions from a diverse set of participants in the debate about how to link environmental policy and trade agreements. The perspectives range from the broadly optimistic about environmental effects of trade and trade liberalization to a more pessimistic view of the economic and social effects of open markets and economic integration. What unites all of the contributions is a commitment to engage constructively in the policy dialogue over how best to integrate trade and environmental policy making in the Americas.
Review
"Greening the Americas digs into the difficult issue of how to address environmental issues in the context of trade liberalization. The book's authors seek to understand the lessons from NAFTA and to apply them to hemisphere-wide efforts to promote freer trade."--Jaime Serra Puche, SAI Consultants, Former Mexican Trade Minister The MIT Press
Review
"In a landscape of policy debate marked by polarized views, bitter protests, and a paucity of empirical data and analysis, this volume demystifies the linkages between trade and environment. Through clear analysis of the real life experience of North America with NAFTA, the book offers important practical lessons for hemispheric trade and environment issues that will help policy makers go beyond the rhetoric and into concrete action for a prosperous and environmentally secure Free Trade Area of the Americas."--Janine Ferretti, Executive Director, North American Commission for Environmental Cooperation The MIT Press
Review
"A frank and thoughtful discussion that identifies practical ways to move the trade and environment issue forward. A must-read for policymakers, scholars and activists searching for ways to integrate trade and environment policy making in the Americas."--Christiana Figueres, Executive Director, Center for Sustainable Development in the Americas The MIT Press
Review
"With perspectives from government officials, trade policy makers, academics, and NGOs, Greening the Americas brings to the trade and environment debate the lessons of the negotiations, agreements, and environmental consequences of NAFTA. The analysis and the options laid out for the current Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA) negotiations should be read and taken into account by all interested parties."--Alejandro Jara, Ambassador of Chile to the WTO, Former Chairperson, WTO Committee on Trade & Environment, and Chairperson, negotiating group for Trade in Services The MIT Press
Review
"Deere and Esty and their contributors analyze the tensions that animate the trade and environment debate and explain why competing claims and objections arise. Greening the Americas charts a realistic course for designing new trade agreements that draw upon the strengths and avoid the mistakes of NAFTA. For those of us who see the trade and environment nexus as central to future progress this is essential reading."--William K. Reilly, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1989-93 The MIT Press
Review
"This book has it all: a thorough assessment of the NAFTA trade and environment experience, a broad range of perspectives from key experts and practitioners, and a comprehensive menu of well-thought-out specific proposals to break the political deadlock. A landmark study, this collection will serve as a reference point for everyone in the field."--Jose Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, Director, Trade Unit, OAS, Former Trade Minister, Costa Rica The MIT Press
Review
"Fiorino's book provides a cogent explanation of how environmental policy got where it is, our successes and our failures. It offers critical insight into the task of crafting a new array of policy tools to tackle the formidable environmental challenges we face today."--William K. Reilly, Administrator, U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, 1989-93 The MIT Press
Review
"This book digs in to the difficult issue of how to address environmental issues in the context of trade liberalization. The book's authors seek to understand the lessons from the NAFTA and to apply them to hemisphere-wide efforts to promote freer trade." Jaime Serra Puche , former Mexican Trade Minister and Chief NAFTA negotiator The MIT Press
Synopsis
A study of the environmental content and consequences of the North American Free Trade Agreement and the lessons to be drawn for the proposed Free Trade Area of the Americas agreement.
Synopsis
Attention to environmental issues is vital if the full potential economic benefits of international trade are to be realized.
About the Author
Carolyn L. Deere is Assistant Director of the Global Inclusion Theme of the Rockefeller Foundation.Daniel C. Esty, formerly a top official with the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, is Professor of Environmental Law and Policy at Yale University and Associate Dean of the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies.