
Winner of ASA's 2019 Charles Tilly Distinguished Book AwardTrade was once an esoteric economic issue with little domestic policy resonance. Activists did not prioritize it, and grassroots political mobilization seemed unlikely to free trade advocates. The passage of the North American Free Trade Agreement in the early 1990s was therefore expected to be a fait accompli. Yet, as Trade Battles shows, activists pushed back: they increased the public consciousness on trade, mobilized new constituencies against it, and demanded that the rules of the global economy protect the collective rights and common good of citizens. Activists also forged a sustained challenge to U.S. trade policies after NAFTA, setting the stage for future trade battles. Using data from extensive archival materials and over 215 interviews with Mexican, Canadian, and U.S. trade negotiators; labor and environmental activists; and government officials, Tamara Kay and R.L. Evans assess how activists politicized trade policy by leveraging broad divisions across state and non-state arenas. Further, they demonstrate how activists were not only able to politicize trade policy, but also to pressure negotiators to include labor and environmental protections in NAFTA's side agreements. A timely contribution, Trade Battles seeks to understand the role of civil society in shaping state policy.
This book investigates how civil society activists successfully transformed international trade policy from an obscure economic concern into a highly politicized domestic issue. Authors R.L. Evans and Tamara Kay, both scholars in sociology and international studies, utilize a rigorous analytical framework to examine how grassroots mobilization challenged the established consensus surrounding the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). They argue that by leveraging divisions between state and non-state actors, activists forced the inclusion of labor and environmental protections into international trade agreements.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to the study of social movements and their impact on institutional policy-making. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose and the depth of the primary source evidence provided by the authors.
Page Count:
264
Publication Date:
2018-08-08
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190847433
ISBN-13:
9780190847432
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