This handbook provides an integrated framework for a sustainable, pro-poor
and gender-sensitive approach to trade policy-making.
A major part of the silence around gender, trade
and investment at the level of governance of
the trading system would appear to be lack of
understanding of the conceptual, empirical and
policy links between gender and trade. Paradoxically,
along with the view that trade policies are
gender blind there is also an underlying popular
viewpoint among some trade scholars and trade
policy decision-makers that trade liberalisation
has unambiguously benefited women in terms of
widespread employment. However, emerging evidence
shows that trade liberalisation can have both
positive and negative effects on women’s
economic and social status.
This book is an information and training tool
for policy-makers and inter-governmental and
civil society organisations interested in building
and enhancing their knowledge of the important
linkages between trade and investment policy
and gender equality objectives and priorities.
It also presents recommendations on the key
issues as well as the identification of strategies
that could be utilised by different stakeholders.
Contents
Foreword, Preface, Executive Summary
1. Multilateral and regional trading arrangements
and globalisation
2. Gender and the multilateral trading system
(MTS)
3. Agricultural trade liberalisation
4. Services trade liberalisation
5. Investment trade liberalisation
6. Intellectual property rights (IPRs) trade
liberalisation
7. Strategies and recommendations for integrating
gender into the MTS
Bibliography, Glossary, Appendices, Tables
About The author
Mariama Williams PhD is an international economics
and gender consultant, the Research Adviser
for the International Gender and Trade Network
(ITGN), a Director of the Institute for Law
and Economics (ILE-Jamaica) and a member of
Development Alternatives with Women for a New
Era (DAWN).
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