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Frontline Developing Country
WTO Negotiators to
Write a Book on Their Experiences
Geneva, September 14.
2010
CUTS International
today launched a project to publish a book with 17 key
developing country negotiators agreeing to contribute to the
initiative. The project was launched by CUTS Geneva Resource
Centre organising a Writers’ Workshop at Geneva,
Switzerland, where the content and process of this
publication was decided, aiming to bring it out within a
year.
“A very important
contribution to an understanding of the ongoing Doha Round
of trade negotiations from a developing country perspective”
stated one key diplomat reflecting the sense of the house.
“We will have a forward looking approach towards who can
make use of this book and how” said another. “I have a story
to tell which has never been published before” said a third
negotiator. All agreed to undertake a collaborative exercise
to preserve history they have witnessed from the trenches of
the comatose Doha Round as well as guide future negotiators
on the opportunities and pitfalls experienced by developing
countries who have become the main demanders of the round
now.
12 of the 17
negotiators took time out of their busy schedules to discuss
and coordinate chapters they will write on substantive
issues under negotiations ranging from agriculture and
non-agriculture market access to trade facilitation and
Trade Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights as
well as the key developing country coalitions like G-20,
G-33 and Non-agricultural Market Access-11. They also
discussed horizontal issues such as negotiating process,
institutional dynamics and role of the secretariat and the
chairs of various negotiating groups that deserve reflection
and eventual incorporation in the book.
CUTS staff was
humbled by the enthusiasm and support received from such
senior negotiators who have committed to take time out of
their ambassadorial and other key responsibilities in Geneva
and capitals to contribute to their latest. It only
redoubled their resolve to bring out a volume that benefits
trade negotiators, academics and historians alike.
For further
details, contact
geneva@cuts.org |