Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gxg78 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-24T12:34:28.958Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

References

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 January 2021

Kristen Hopewell
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia, Vancouver
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Clash of Powers
US-China Rivalry in Global Trade Governance
, pp. 215 - 240
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Aaronson, Susan Ariel, and Zimmerman, Jamie M.. 2006. “Fair Trade? How Oxfam Presented a Systemic Approach to Poverty, Development, Human Rights, and Trade.” Human Rights Quarterly 28(4): 998.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
ACCF (American Council for Capital Formation). 2015. “US Coal Plant Financing Policy: A Threat to Long-Term US Interests in the Developing World.” American Council for Capital Formation, Center for Policy Research Special Report. February 2015.Google Scholar
Acharya, Amitav. 2014. The End of American World Order. Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Akhtar, Shayerah Ilias. 2015. “Export–Import Bank: Overview and Reauthorization Issues.” Congressional Research Service. March 25, 2015.Google Scholar
Allee, Todd. 2012. “The Role of the United States: A Multilevel Explanation for Decreased Support Over Time.” In Narlikar, A., Daunton, M., and Stern, R. M. (eds.) The Oxford Handbook on The World Trade Organization Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Altman, Daniel. 2007. “Managing Globalization: Interview with Charlene Barshefsky on Doha.” International Herald Tribune. January 31, 2007.Google Scholar
Anderson, Kym. 2017. Finishing Global Farm Trade Reform: Implications for Developing Countries. Adelaide: University of Adelaide Press.Google Scholar
Anderson, Perry. 2013. “Imperium.” New Left Review (83): 5111.Google Scholar
Armijo, Leslie. 2007. “The BRICS Countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) as Analytical Category: Mirage or Insight?Asian Perspective 31(4): 742.Google Scholar
Arrighi, Giovanni, and Silver, Beverly J.. 1999. Chaos and Governance in the Modern World System. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.Google Scholar
Atzl, Andreas. 2014. “Transnational NGO Networks Campaign against the Ilisu Dam, Turkey.” In Scheumann, Waltina and Hensengerth, Oliver (eds.) Evolution of Dam Policies: Evidence from the Big Hydropower States. Berlin: Springer: 201–28.Google Scholar
Auboin, Marc. 2015. “Improving the Availability of Trade Finance in Developing Countries: An Assessment of Remaining Gaps.” WTO Working Paper ERSD-2015-06.Google Scholar
Babones, Salvatore. 2011. “The Middling Kingdom: The Hype and the Reality of China’s Rise.” Foreign Affairs 90(5): 79.Google Scholar
Babones, Salvatore. 2015. “American Hegemony Is Here to Stay.” National Interest. June 11, 2015. https://nationalinterest.org/feature/american-hegemony-here-stay-13089.Google Scholar
Bair, Jennifer. 2009. “Taking Aim at the New International Economic Order.” In Mirowski, Philip and Plehwe, Dieter (eds.) The Road from Mont Pèlerin: The Making of the Neoliberal Thought Collective. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.Google Scholar
Baldwin, Robert E. 1987. “The New Protectionism: A Response to Shifts in National Economic Power.” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper No. 1823. November 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ban, Cornel, and Blyth, Mark. 2013. “The BRICs and the Washington Consensus: An Introduction.” Review of International Political Economy 20(2): 241–55.Google Scholar
Barnett, Michael, and Duvall, Raymond. 2005. “Power in International Politics.” International Organization 59(1): 3975.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Beattie, Alan. 2014. “America’s Craven Capitulation in the WTO.” Financial Times. Beyond BRICS Blog. October 8, 2014.Google Scholar
Beckley, Michael. 2011. “China’s Century? Why America’s Edge Will Endure.” International Security 36(3): 4178.Google Scholar
Beeson, Mark, and Bell, S.. 2009. “The G-20 and International Economic Governance: Hegemony, Collectivism, or Both.” Global Governance 15: 6786.Google Scholar
Bergsten, Fred. 2014. “Fighting Fire with Fire on Exports.” Washington Post. September 14, 2014.Google Scholar
Blackmon, Pamela. 2016. “OECD Export Credit Agencies: Supplementing Short-Term Export Credit Insurance during the 2008 Financial Crisis.” International Trade Journal 30(4): 295318.Google Scholar
Blackmon, Pamela. 2017. The Political Economy of Trade Finance: Export Credit Agencies, the Paris Club and the IMF. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Block, Fred, and Keller, Matthew R.. 2011. State of Innovation: The US Government’s Role in Technology Development. Boulder, CO: Paradigm Publishers.Google Scholar
Block, Fred, and Keller, Matthew R.. 2014. “Can the US Sustain Its Global Position? Dynamism and Stagnation in the US Institutional Model.” Political Power and Social Theory 26: 1951.Google Scholar
Bloomberg, . 2015. “With a Rail Merger, China Forging an Industrial Giant Second Only to GE.” June 7, 2015.Google Scholar
Bloomberg, . 2017. “Cheaper Solar in India Prompts Rethink for Coal Projects.” June 1, 2017.Google Scholar
Blustein, Paul. 2009. Misadventures of the Most Favored Nations: Clashing Egos, Inflated Ambitions, and the Great Shambles of the World Trade System. New York: Perseus Books.Google Scholar
Bonucci, Nicola. 2011. “OECD Work on Export Credits: A Legal and Institutional Laboratory.” In Smart Rules for Fair Trade: 50 Years of Export Credits. Paris: OECD: 4953.Google Scholar
Bräutigam, Deborah. 2009. The Dragon’s Gift: The Real Story of China in Africa. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bräutigam, Deborah. 2011. “Aid ‘With Chinese Characteristics’: Chinese Foreign Aid and Development Finance Meet the OECD–DAC Aid Regime.” Journal of International Development 23(5): 752–64.Google Scholar
Bräutigam, Deborah, and Gallagher, Kevin P.. 2014. “Bartering Globalization: China’s Commodity-Backed Finance in Africa and Latin America.” Global Policy 5(3): 346–52.Google Scholar
Bremmer, I., and Roubini, N.. 2011. “A G-Zero World: The New Economic Club Will Produce Conflict, Not Cooperation.” Foreign Affairs 90(2): 27.Google Scholar
Breslin, Shaun. 2003. “Reforming China’s Embedded Socialist Compromise: China and the WTO.” Global Change, Peace and Security 15(3).Google Scholar
Breslin, Shaun. 2013. “China and the Global Order: Signalling Threat or Friendship?International Affairs 89(3): 615–34.Google Scholar
Bridges Daily Update. 2015. “Bridges Daily Update #5—Overview of Outcomes of WTO’s 10th Ministerial in Nairobi.” December 19, 2015.Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2007. “Fisheries Subsidies Text Represents a Strong Starting Point, Say Delegates.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest 11(44).Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2008a. “India, Indonesia and China Present New Proposal on Fisheries Subsidies.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest 12(18).Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2008b. “Rules Chair Issues Negotiations Update; Differences Persist.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest 12(20).Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2010. “WTO Fisheries Talks Focus on Special Treatment for Poor Countries.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest 14(17).Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2017a. “EU, Brazil Call for New WTO Rules on Farm Subsidies, Food Security.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest 21(26).Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2017b. “Fisheries Subsidies in the Spotlight Ahead of UN Ocean Conference.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest May 4.Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2017c. “Japan Reports Fall in Trade-Distorting Farm Subsidies in New WTO Figures.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest. July 13, 2017.Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2017d. “US Initiates WTO Challenge on China’s Grain Subsidies.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest. September 15, 2017.Google Scholar
Bridges Weekly. 2017e. “WTO Rules on Fisheries Subsidies: Progress and Prospects.” Bridges Weekly Trade News Digest. November 3, 2017.Google Scholar
Brooks, Stephen G., and Wohlforth, William C.. 2016. “The Once and Future Superpower.” Foreign Affairs 95(3): 91104.Google Scholar
Brown, Andrew G., and Stern, Robert M.. 2012. “Fairness in the WTO Trading System.” In Narlikar, A., Daunton, M., and Stern, R. M. (eds.) The Oxford Handbook on The World Trade Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Bukovansky, Mlada. 2010. “Institutionalized Hypocrisy and the Politics of Agricultural Trade.” In Abdelal, Rawi, Blyth, Mark, and Parsons, Craig (eds.) Constructing the International Economy. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press: 6889.Google Scholar
Bukovansky, Mlada. 2016. “The Responsibility to Accommodate: Ideas and Change.” In Paul, T. V. (ed.) Accommodating Rising Powers: Past, Present, and Future. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 87108.Google Scholar
Business Standard. 2019. “Air Pollution Kills 1.2 mn Indians in a Year, Third Biggest Cause of Death.” April 3, 2019.Google Scholar
CAFOD. (Catholic Agency for Overseas Development) 2016. “UK Support for Energy in Developing Countries.” In UK Support for Energy 2010–2017: Protecting the Climate and Lifting People out of Poverty? https://cafod.org.uk/content/download/49429/623388/version/4/file/UK%20Support%20for%20Energy%202010-17%20Policy%20Briefing%20web%20version3.pdf.Google Scholar
Campling, Liam, and Havice, Elizabeth. 2013. “Mainstreaming Environment and Development at the World Trade Organization? Fisheries Subsidies, the Politics of Rule-Making, and the Elusive ‘Triple Win’.” Environment and Planning A 45(4): 835–52.Google Scholar
Campling, Liam, and Havice, Elizabeth. 2016. “Fisheries Subsidies, Development and the Global Trade Regime.” In Trade and Environment Review: Fish Trade. Geneva: UNCTAD: 7077.Google Scholar
Caporal, Jack. 2017. “WTO Rules Chair Sees Path for Fisheries Agreement as Members Push for Text.” Inside US Trade Daily Report. March 6, 2017.Google Scholar
Castañeda, Jorge. 2010. “Not Ready for Prime Time: Why Including Emerging Powers at the Helm Would Hurt Global Governance.” Foreign Affairs 89(5).Google Scholar
Chang, Ha-Joon. 2002. Kicking Away the Ladder: Development Strategy in Historical Perspective. London: Anthem Press.Google Scholar
Chen, Stephen. 2017. “China Pledges to Cut Size of Its Massive Fishing Fleet Due to Serious Threat to Nation’s Fish Stocks.” South China Morning Post. June 12, 2017.Google Scholar
Chin, Gregory. 2010. “Remaking the Architecture: The Emerging Powers, Self-Insuring and Regional Insulation.” International Affairs 86(3): 693715.Google Scholar
Chin, Gregory. 2015. “The State of the Art: Trends in the Study of the BRICS and Multilateral Organizations.” In Lesage, Dries and Van de Graaf, Thijs (eds.) Rising Powers and Multilateral Institutions. London: Palgrave: 1941.Google Scholar
Chin, Gregory, and Freeman, Carla P.. 2016. “What Is Next? … for World Order and Global Governance.” Global Policy. November 3, 2016.Google Scholar
Chin, Gregory, and Gallagher, Kevin. 2015. “Demise of the US Ex-Im Bank Would Leave the Field to China.” Financial Times. Beyond BRICS Blog. June 22, 2015.Google Scholar
Chorev, Nitsan. 2008. Remaking US Trade Policy: From Protectionism to Globalization. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Christoff, Peter. 2016. “The Promissory Note: COP 21 and the Paris Climate Agreement.” Environmental Politics 25(5): 765–87.Google Scholar
Clapp, Jennifer. 2007. “WTO Agriculture Negotiations and the Global South.” In Lee, Donna and Wilkinson, Rorden (eds.) The WTO After Hong Kong: Progress in, and Prospects for, the Doha Development Agenda. New York: Routledge: 3755.Google Scholar
Clapp, Jennifer. 2015. “Food Security and Contested Agricultural Trade Norms.” Journal of International Law and International Relations 11: 104–15.Google Scholar
CNN. 2017. “What Is in Our Air.” January 13, 2017.Google Scholar
Cooper, Andrew. 2016. The BRICS: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Coppens, Dominic. 2014. WTO Disciplines on Subsidies and Countervailing Measures: Balancing Policy Space and Legal Constraints. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Cox, Michael. 2012. “Power Shifts, Economic Change and the Decline of the West?International Relations 26(4): 369–88.Google Scholar
CRS. (Congressional Research Service) 2017. “Major Agricultural Trade Issues in the 115th Congress.” Congressional Research Service. January 30, 2017.Google Scholar
Crutsinger, M. 1999. “Five Nations Call for End to Harmful Fishing Subsidies.” Associated Press. March 13, 1999.Google Scholar
Curzon, Gerard, and Curzon, Victoria. 1973. “GATT: Traders’ Club.” In Cox, Robert W. and Jacobson, Harold K. (eds.) The Anatomy of Influence: Decision-Making in International Organization. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press: 298333.Google Scholar
CUTS. 2017. “WTO Fisheries Subsidies Negotiations: Main Issues and Interests of Least Developed Countries.” Geneva: CUTS International.Google Scholar
Dadush, Uri. 2009. “WTO Reform: The Time to Start Is Now.” Carnegie Policy Brief 80. https://carnegieendowment.org/files/WTO_reform.pdf.Google Scholar
Dalton, Matthew. 2011. “EU Finds China Gives Aid to Huawei, ZTE.” Wall Street Journal. February 3, 2011. www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703960804576120012288591074.Google Scholar
Das, Dilip K. 2007. The Evolving Global Trade Architecture. Northampton, MA: Edward Elgar.Google Scholar
Deming, Chen, and Peiru, Liaw. 2016. Economic Crisis and Rule Reconstruction. Singapore: World Scientific.Google Scholar
Department of Energy and Climate Change. 2013. “UK Urges the World to Prepare for Action on Climate Change and Puts Brakes on Coal Fired Power Plants.” Department of Energy and Climate Change, Press Release. November 13, 2013.Google Scholar
Doak, N., Murai, M., and Douvere, F.. 2016. Report on the Mission to the Sundarbans World Heritage Site, Bangladesh, from 22 to 28 March 2016. http://defence.pk/threads/report-on-the-mission-to-the-sundarbans-world-heritage-site-bangladesh-from-22-to-28-march-2016.458823/.Google Scholar
Doumbouya, Alkaly, Camara, Ousmane T., Mamie, Josephus, Intchama, Jeremias F., Jarra, Abdoulie, Ceesay, Salifu, Guèye, Assane, Ndiaye, Diène, Beibou, Ely, Padilla, Allan, and Belhabib, Dyhia. 2017. “Assessing the Effectiveness of Monitoring Control and Surveillance of Illegal Fishing: The Case of West Africa.” Frontiers in Marine Science 4(50).Google Scholar
Downs, Erica. 2011. Inside China, Inc.: China Development Bank’s Cross-Border Energy Deals. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution.Google Scholar
Drache, Daniel. 2004. “Global Trade Politics and the Cycle of Dissent Post-Cancún.” Policy and Society 24(3): 1744.Google Scholar
DRC. 2014. “Optimizing and Upgrading Industrial Structure.” Development Research Center of the State Council of the People’s Republic of China. May 23, 2014.Google Scholar
Drezner, Daniel W. 2007. “The New New World Order.” Foreign Affairs 86(2): 3446.Google Scholar
Drezner, Daniel W. 2011. “… And China Isn’t Beating the US.” Foreign Policy (184):67.Google Scholar
Drysdale, David. 2015. “Why the OECD Arrangement Works (Even Though It Is Only Soft Law).” In Klasen, Andreas and Bannert, Fiona (eds.) The Future of Foreign Trade Support—Setting Global Standards for Export Credit and Political Risk Insurance. Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
E&E News. 2015a. “Nations Conflict on Subsidy Rules for Exporting Coal-Fired Power Plants.” E&E News. November 10, 2015.Google Scholar
E&E News. 2015b. “New Coal-Fired Power Enjoys Support among Bankers in Germany and Asia.” E&E News. August 13, 2015.Google Scholar
E&E News. 2015c. “US Strikes Deal to Block Coal Plants Worldwide.” E&E News. November 18, 2015.Google Scholar
E&E News. 2017. “Trump Is Pushing Coal Abroad. Markets May Abide—for Now.” E&E News. December 13, 2017.Google Scholar
Eagleton-Pierce, Matthew. 2012. Symbolic Power in the World Trade Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Eberlein, Christine, Drillisch, Heike, Ayboga, Ercan, and Wenidoppler, Thomas. 2010. “The Ilisu Dam in Turkey and the Role of Export Credit Agencies and NGO Networks.” Water Alternatives 3(2): 291311.Google Scholar
Eco-Business. 2017. “Vietnam Makes a Big Push for Coal, While Pledging to Curb Emissions.” Eco-Business. May 30, 2017.Google Scholar
Economic Times. 2016. “Indo-Bangla Forum Writes to PM against Proposed Power Plant.” Economic Times. October 18, 2016.Google Scholar
The Economist. 2012. “Something Old, Something New: A Brief History of State Capitalism.” The Economist. January 21, 2012.Google Scholar
The Economist. 2017. “All the Fish in the Sea: Ocean Fishing.” The Economist. May 27, 2017.Google Scholar
Efstathopoulos, Charalampos, and Kelly, Dominic. 2014. “India, Developmental Multilateralism and the Doha Ministerial Conference.” Third World Quarterly 35(6): 1066–81.Google Scholar
Eilperin, Juliet. 2015. “In a Major Step on the Road to Paris, Rich Countries Agree to Slash Export Subsidies for Coal Plants.” Washington Post. November 18, 2015.Google Scholar
Elsig, Manfred, and Dupont, Cedric. 2012. “Persistent Deadlock in Multilateral Trade Negotiations: The Case of Doha.” In Narlikar, A., Daunton, M., and Stern, R.M. (eds.) The Oxford Handbook on The World Trade Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press: 587606.Google Scholar
Erickson, Andrew S., and Kennedy, Conor M.. 2016. “China’s Maritime Militia.” Foreign Affairs Snapshot. June 23, 2016.Google Scholar
EU (European Union). 2011. “Export Finance Activities by the Chinese Government.” Briefing Paper. Directorate-General for External Policies, European Parliament. EXPO/B/INTA/FWC/2009-01/Lot7/15.Google Scholar
EU 2015. “Council Decision on the Position to Be Taken by the European Union within the OECD Export Credit Committees on Modifications of the OECD Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits.” Brussels. July 20, 2015. COM(2015) 353 final.Google Scholar
EU 2016. “Study on the Subsidies to the Fisheries, Aquaculture, and Marketing and Processing Subsectors in Major Fishing Nations beyond the EU.” Brussels, Directorate-General for Maritime Affairs and Fisheries, MARE/2011/01 Lot 2.Google Scholar
European Commission. 2015. “Report from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council: Annual Report on Negotiations Undertaken by the Commission in the Field of Export Credits, in the Sense of Regulation (EU) No. 1233/2011.” Brussels. October 20, 2015. COM(2015) 516.Google Scholar
Evenett, Simon. 2007. “EU Commercial Policy in a Multipolar Trading System.” University of St. Gallen Law & Economics Working Paper No. 15. https://ssrn.com/abstract=985514.Google Scholar
Exim. 2006. “Report to US Congress on the Export–Import Bank of the United States and Global Export Credit Competition.” US Export–Import Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Exim. 2014. “Report to US Congress on the Export–Import Bank of the United States and Global Export Credit Competition.” US Export–Import Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Exim. 2015. “Report to US Congress on Global Export Credit Competition.” US Export–Import Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Exim. 2016. “Report to US Congress on Global Export Credit Competition.” US Export–Import Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Exim. 2018. “Report to US Congress on Global Export Credit Competition.” US Export–Import Bank, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Ezell, Stephen J. 2011. “Understanding the Importance of Export Credit Financing to US Competitiveness.” The Information Technology & Innovation Foundation, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
Falkner, Robert. 2005. “American Hegemony and the Global Environment.” International Studies Review 7(4): 585–99.Google Scholar
FAO. (Food and Agriculture Organization) 2016. The State of the World’s Fisheries and Aquaculture: Contributing to Food Security and Nutrition for All. Rome: UN Food and Agriculture Organization.Google Scholar
FAO. 2018. The State of the World’s Fisheries and Aquaculture. Rome: UN Food and Agriculture Organization.Google Scholar
Ferdinand, Peter. 2016. “Westward Ho—The China Dream and ‘One Belt, One Road’: Chinese Foreign Policy under Xi Jinping.” International Affairs 92(4): 941–57.Google Scholar
Fevrier, Stephen, and Dugal, Manleen. 2016. “The WTO’s Role in Fisheries Subsidies and Its Implications for Africa.” Bridges Africa. December 20, 2016.Google Scholar
Financial Times. 2011. “US to Match Chinese Terms for Train Order.” Financial Times. January 12, 2011.Google Scholar
Financial Times. 2015a. “Export Subsidies for Coal Power Stations Reigned in by OECD.” Financial Times. November 18, 2015.Google Scholar
Financial Times. 2015b. “Rich Nations Assess Plan to Slash Billions from Coal Investment.” Financial Times. November 9, 2015.Google Scholar
Financial Times. 2017. “AIIB Chief Aims to Rival Lenders Such as ADB and World Bank.” Financial Times. May 4, 2017.Google Scholar
FOE. (Friends of the Earth) 2016. “Strengthening the OECD Coal-Fired Sector Understanding.” November 2016.Google Scholar
FOE, OCI, & WWF. 2017. “Financing Climate Disaster: How Export Credit Agencies Are a Boon for Oil and Gas.” Friends of the Earth, OilChange International, and World Wide Fund for Nature. https://1bps6437gg8c169i0y1drtgz-wpengine.netdna-ssl.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/10/2017.10.16_FinancingClimateDisaster_final.pdf.Google Scholar
Foot, Rosemary. 2017. “Power Transitions and Great Power Management: Three Decades of China–Japan–US Relations.” Pacific Review 30(6): 829–84.Google Scholar
Forsythe, Michael. 2016. “China Curbs Plans for More Coal-Fired Power Plants.” New York Times. April 25, 2016.Google Scholar
Fortnam, Brett. 2017a. “US Rejects Chinese Proposal for Trade Remedy Rules Negotiations at the WTO.” Inside US Trade Daily Report 35(22).Google Scholar
Fortnam, Brett. 2017b. “WTO Members Expected to Commit to Continue Fisheries Talks after MC11.” Inside US Trade Daily Report.Google Scholar
Fortnam, Brett. 2017c. “WTO Members Fear China Could Link AD and Fisheries Proposals, Sink Ministerial Outcome.” Inside US Trade Daily Report. May 5, 2017.Google Scholar
Frazier, Mark W. 2013. “Narrowing the Gap: Rural–Urban Inequality in China.” World Politics Review. September 24, 2013.Google Scholar
Gale, Fred. 2013. “Growth and Evolution in China’s Agricultural Support Policies.” USDA Economic Research Service Report #153. August.Google Scholar
Gallagher, Kevin P. 2008a. “Trading Away the Ladder? Trade Politics and Economic Development in the Americas.” New Political Economy 13(1): 3759.Google Scholar
Gallagher, Kevin P. 2008b. “Understanding Developing Country Resistance to the Doha Round.” Review of International Political Economy 15(1): 6285.Google Scholar
Gallagher, Kevin P., Irwin, Amos, and Koleski, Katherine. 2012. “The New Banks in Town: Chinese Finance in Latin America.” Inter-American Dialogue Report. March 2012.Google Scholar
Gao, Henry. 2015. “From the Doha Round to the China Round.” In Picker, Colin B., Greenacre, Jonathan, and Toohey, Lisa (eds.) China in the International Economic Order: New Directions and Changing Paradigms. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 7997.Google Scholar
GATT. 1994. “Agreement Establishing the WTO.” Uruguay Round Agreements, Marrakesh. April 15, 1994.Google Scholar
Gelder, Jan Willem van, German, Laura, and Bailis, Rob. 2012. “Biofuels Investments in Tropical Forest-Rich Countries: Implications for Responsible Finance.” Sustainability Accounting, Management and Policy Journal 3(2): 134–60.Google Scholar
Gibbs, Murray. 2000. “Special and Differential Treatment in the Context of Globalization.” In A Positive Agenda for Developing Countries: Issues for Future Trade Negotiations. Geneva: UNCTAD.Google Scholar
Gilpin, Robert. 1987. The Political Economy of International Relations. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Godfrey, Mark. 2017. “China Makes Concessions on Eve of WTO Fisheries Talks.” Seafood Source. December 12, 2017.Google Scholar
Godfrey, Mark. 2018a. “China Becoming an Environmentalist at Home, While Plundering Abroad.” Seafood Source. March 28, 2018.Google Scholar
Godfrey, Mark. 2018b. “China Rushing to Build Global Fishing Bases before Capping Its Fleet Size.” Seafood Source. January 17, 2018.Google Scholar
Gonter, Michael. 2011. “Premium: The Least Understood Rules of the Arrangement.” In Smart Rules for Fair Trade: 50 Years of Export Credits. Paris: OECD: 220–24.Google Scholar
Gray, Kevin, and Murphy, Craig N. (eds.). 2015. Rising Powers and the Future of Global Governance London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Greenpeace. 2015. “Africa’s Fisheries Paradise at a Crossroads: Investigating Chinese Companies’ Illegal Fishing Practices in West Africa.” Greenpeace East Asia and Greenpeace Africa.Google Scholar
Greenpeace. 2016. “Give a Man a Fish—Five Facts on China’s Distant Water Fishing Subsidies.” Greenpeace East Asia Briefing. August 8, 2016.Google Scholar
Greenville, Jared. 2017. “Domestic Support to Agriculture and Trade: Implications for Multilateral Reform.” Geneva: ICTSD.Google Scholar
The Guardian. 2015a. “Japan and South Korea Top List of Biggest Coal Financiers.” June 2, 2015.Google Scholar
The Guardian. 2015b. “OECD Talks to Phase out Coal Subsidies End in Stalemate.” June 12, 2015.Google Scholar
The Guardian. 2016. “Greenpeace Sounds Alarm over China’s Long-Distance Fishing Fleet.” August 9, 2016.Google Scholar
Hall, Steven. 2011. “Managing Tied Aid Competition: Domestic Politics, Credible Threats, and the Helsinki Disciplines.” Review of International Political Economy 18(5): 646–72.Google Scholar
Hameiri, Shahar, and Jones, Lee. 2018. “China Challenges Global Governance? Chinese International Development Finance and the AIIB.” International Affairs 94(3): 573–93.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Alexander. 1790. Report on Manufactures. Philadelphia: Childs and Swaine.Google Scholar
Hampson, Fen Osler, and Heinbecker, Paul. 2011. “The ‘New’ Multilateralism of the Twenty-First Century.” Global Governance: A Review of Multilateralism and International Organizations 17(3): 299310.Google Scholar
Hancock, Tom. 2018a. “China’s Long-Distance Fishing Fleet Dependent on Subsidies.” Financial Times. June 13, 2018.Google Scholar
Hancock, Tom. 2018b. “China Seeks Bigger Catch from Far-Sea Fishing Fleet.” Financial Times. February 9, 2018.Google Scholar
Hannah, Erin. 2015. NGOs and Global Trade: Non-State Voices in EU Trade Policymaking. Abingdon: Routledge.Google Scholar
Hannah, Erin, Ryan, Holly, and Scott, James. 2017. “Power, Knowledge and Resistance: Between Co-Optation and Revolution in Global Trade.” Review of International Political Economy 24(5): 741–75.Google Scholar
Hannah, Erin, and Scott, James. 2017. “From Palais de Nations to Centre William Rappard: Raúl Prebisch and UNCTAD as Sources of Ideas in the GATT/WTO.” In Margulis, Matias E. (ed.) The Global Political Economy of Raúl Prebisch. New York: Routledge: 116–34.Google Scholar
Hannah, Erin, Scott, James, and Wilkinson, Rorden. 2018. “The WTO in Buenos Aires: The Outcome and Its Significance for the Future of the Multilateral Trading System.” The World Economy. May 6, 2018.Google Scholar
Hannam, Phillip Matthew. 2016. “Contesting Authority: The New Landscape of Power Sector Governance in the Developing World.” PhD thesis. Princeton University.Google Scholar
Hao, Feng. 2017. “China’s Belt and Road Initiative Still Pushing Coal.” China Dialogue. May 12, 2017.Google Scholar
Harkell, Louise. 2017. “CNFC: Chinese Squid Fishing Activities Near Argentina up 270%, Peru 515%.” Undercurrent News. May 26, 2017.Google Scholar
Harkell, Louise. 2018. “China Pulls Plug on Subsidies, Licenses of Firms Involved in IUU.” Undercurrent News. March 9, 2018.Google Scholar
Hart, Melanie, Bassett, Luke, and Johnson, Blaine. 2017. “Everything You Think You Know about Coal in China Is Wrong.” Center for American Progress Blog. May 15, 2017.Google Scholar
Hejazi, Mina, and Marchant, Mary A.. 2017. “China’s Evolving Agricultural Support Policies.” Choices 32(2).Google Scholar
Hochstetler, Kathryn, and Milkoreit, Manjana. 2015. “Responsibilities in Transition: Emerging Powers in the Climate Change Negotiations.” Global Governance 21(2): 205–26.Google Scholar
Hoekman, Bernard. 1995. “Assessing the General Agreement on Trade in Services.” In Martin, Will and Winters, L. Alan (eds.) The Uruguay Round and the Developing Countries. Washington, DC: World Bank: 326–64.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2015. “Different Paths to Power: The Rise of Brazil, India and China at the WTO.” Review of International Political Economy 22(2): 311–38.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2016. Breaking the WTO: How Emerging Powers Disrupted the Neoliberal Project. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2017a. “The BRICS—Merely a Fable? Emerging Power Alliances in Global Trade Governance.” International Affairs 93(6): 1377–96.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2017b. “The Liberal International Economic Order on the Brink.” Current History 116(793): 303–8.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2017c. “When Market Fundamentalism and Industrial Policy Collide: The Tea Party and the US Export–Import Bank.” Review of International Political Economy 24(4): 569–98.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2018. “What Is ‘Made in China 2025’—and Why Is It a Threat to Trump’s Trade Goals?” Washington Post. May 3, 2018.Google Scholar
Hopewell, Kristen. 2019. “How Rising Powers Create Governance Gaps: The Case of Export Credit and the Environment.” Global Environmental Politics 19(1): 3452.Google Scholar
Hornby, Lucy. 2015. “Beijing Constrained by Record Farm Stockpiles.” Financial Times. February 3, 2015.Google Scholar
Hornby, Lucy. 2017. “A Bigger Catch: China’s Fishing Fleet Hunts New Ocean Targets.” Financial Times. March 27, 2017.Google Scholar
Hovi, Jon, Sprinz, Detlef F., and Bang, Guri. 2012. “Why the United States Did Not Become a Party to the Kyoto Protocol: German, Norwegian, and US Perspectives.” European Journal of International Relations 18(1): 129–50.Google Scholar
Hufbauer, Gary, Fickling, Meera, and Wong, Woan Foong. 2011. “Revitalizing the Export–Import Bank.” Peterson Institute for International Economics, Policy Brief No. PB11-6.Google Scholar
Hung, H. F. 2015. The China Boom: Why China Will Not Rule the World. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Hurrell, Andrew. 2004. “Power, Institutions, and the Production of Inequality.” In Barnett, Michael and Duvall, Raymond (eds.) Power in Global Governance. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 3358.Google Scholar
ICAC (International Cotton Advisory Committee). 2016a. “Cotton Report.” Presentation by Jose Sette, ICAC Executive Director, WTO 6th Dedicated Discussion of the Relevant Trade-Related Developments on Cotton, Geneva. November 23, 2016.Google Scholar
ICAC 2016b. “Production and Trade Policies Affecting the Cotton Industry.” International Cotton Advisory Committee, Washington, DC.Google Scholar
ICTSD (International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development). 2013. “Cotton: Trends in Global Production, Trade and Policy.” Geneva: ICTSD Programme on Agriculture Trade and Sustainable Development.Google Scholar
ICTSD 2015. “National Agricultural Policies, Trade, and the New Multilateral Agenda.” Geneva: ICTSD Programme on Agriculture Trade and Sustainable Development.Google Scholar
IDEAS Centre. 2013. “Cotton Update.” Newsletter 101. February 21, 2013.Google Scholar
IEA. 2014a. “World Energy Investment Outlook.” International Energy Agency. www.iea.org/reports/world-energy-investment-outlook.Google Scholar
IEA. 2014b. “World Energy Outlook 2014.” International Energy Agency, Paris. www.oecd-ilibrary.org/energy/world-energy-outlook-2014_weo-2014-en.Google Scholar
IEA. 2015. “World Energy Outlook 2015.” International Energy Agency, Paris. www.oecd-ilibrary.org/energy/world-energy-outlook-2015_weo-2015-en.Google Scholar
IEA. 2017a. “World Energy Access Outlook 2017.” International Energy Agency, Paris. www.oecd-ilibrary.org/energy/world-energy-outlook-2017_weo-2017-en.Google Scholar
IEA. 2017b. International Finance for Coal-Fired Power Plants. London: IEA Clean Coal Centre.Google Scholar
Ikenberry, G. John. 2011. Liberal Leviathan: The Origins, Crisis, and Transformation of the American World Order. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Ikenberry, G. John. 2015a. “The Future of Liberal World Order.” Japanese Journal of Political Science 16(3): 450–55.Google Scholar
Ikenberry, G. John. 2015b. “The Future of Multilateralism: Governing the World in a Post-Hegemonic Era.” Japanese Journal of Political Science 16(3): 399413.Google Scholar
Ilcan, Susan, and Lacey, Anita. 2006. “Governing through Empowerment: Oxfam’s Global Reform and Trade Campaign.” Globalizations 3(2): 207–25.Google Scholar
Imboden, Nicolas. 2014. “How to Re-invigorate the Cotton Issue at the WTO: Gin Ideas, Spin Proposals, Weave Solutions and Avoid Stocks.” In Meléndez-Ortiz, Ricardo, Bellmann, Christophe, and Hepburn, Jonathan (eds.) Tackling Agriculture in the Post-Bali Context—A Collection of Short Essays. Geneva: ICTSD.Google Scholar
Inside US Trade. 2012. “US, EU Use WTO Policy Review to Critique China’s Opaque Trade Regime.” June 12, 2012.Google Scholar
Inside US Trade. 2016. “Punke: US Seeks to Conclude EGA By September G20 Leaders Meeting.” May 10, 2016.Google Scholar
Inside US Trade. 2019. “China: US Stance on WTO Development Status Shows It Is ‘Capricious, Arrogant and Selfish’.” July 29, 2019.Google Scholar
Inside US–China Trade. 2016a. “Brady, Froman, Obama Link WTO Challenge of China’s Ag Support to TPP.” 16(37).Google Scholar
Inside US–China Trade. 2016b. “US Wheat Industry Backtracks on Call for WTO Case on China Subsidies.” 16(14).Google Scholar
Inside US–China Trade. 2016c. “US Wheat Industry Leader: More Steps Needed to Counter Chinese Policies.” 16(41).Google Scholar
Inside US–China Trade. 2017a. “US–China Domestic Agricultural Support Case Moves Toward Panel Stage.” 35(4).Google Scholar
Inside US–China Trade. 2017b. “WTO Members Remain Deadlocked in Ag Talks Despite Flurry of Proposals.” 35(30).Google Scholar
ITC (International Trade Commission). 2015. Rice: Global Competitiveness of the US Industry. Washington, DC: US International Trade Commission.Google Scholar
Jacobs, Andrew. 2017. “China’s Appetite Pushes Fish Stocks to Brink.” New York Times. April 30, 2017.Google Scholar
Jacques, Martin. 2009. When China Rules the World: The Rise of the Middle Kingdom and the End of the Western World. London: Allen Lane.Google Scholar
Jing, Li, and Man-ki, Kwong. 2015. “China Unveils Ambitious Plans for ‘Made in China’ Upgrade within 10 Years.” South China Morning Post . May 19, 2015.Google Scholar
Jones, Emily, and Weinhardt, Clara. 2015. “Echoes of Colonialism in the Negotiation of Economic Partnership Agreements.” In Nicolaïdis, Kalypso, Sebe, Berny, and Maas, Gabrielle (eds.) Echoes of Empire: Memory, Identity and the Legacy of Imperialism. London: I. B. Tauris.Google Scholar
Kagan, Robert. 2010. “The Perils of Wishful Thinking.” National Interest 5(3): 1416.Google Scholar
Kagan, Robert. 2012. The World America Made. New York: Knopf.Google Scholar
Kahler, Miles. 2010. “Asia and the Reform of Global Governance.” Asian Economic Policy Review 5(2): 178–93.Google Scholar
Kahler, Miles. 2016. “The Global Economic Multilaterals: Will Eighty Years Be Enough?Global Governance 22(1): 19.Google Scholar
Kapoor, Ilan. 2006. “Deliberative Democracy and the WTO.” Review of International Political Economy 11(3): 522–41.Google Scholar
Karkovirta, Pekka. 2011. “Implementing Environmental Common Approaches.” In Smart Rules for Fair Trade: 50 years of Export Credits. Paris: OECD: 167–71.Google Scholar
Karnitschnig, Matthew. 2017. “Baijing’s Balkan Backdoor.” Politico. July 13, 2017.Google Scholar
Katzenstein, Peter J. 2005. A World of Regions: Asia and Europe in the American Imperium. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Kelly, Dominic, and Grant, Wyn. 2005. “Introduction: Trade Politics in Context.” In Kelly, Dominic and Grant, Wyn (eds.) The Politics of International Trade in the Twenty-First Century: Actors, Issues, and Regional Dynamics. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Kennedy, Scott. 2015. “Made in China 2025.” Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, DC. June 1, 2015.Google Scholar
Keohane, Robert. 1982. “The Demand for International Regimes.” International Organization 36(2): 325–55.Google Scholar
Keohane, Robert. 1984. After Hegemony: Cooperation and Discord in the World Political Economy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press.Google Scholar
Keohane, Robert, and Nye, Joseph S.. 2011. Power and Interdependence. New York: Longman.Google Scholar
Kiko Network et al. 2017. “Dirty Coal: Breaking the Myth about Japanese-Funded Coal Plants.” Kiko Network, JACSES, Friends of the Earth Japan, CoalSwarm, Friends of the Earth US, and Sierra Club. April 2017.Google Scholar
Kirshner, Jonathan. 2012. “The Tragedy of Offensive Realism: Classical Realism and the Rise of China.” European Journal of International Relations 18(1): 5375.Google Scholar
Kong, Bo, and Gallagher, Kevin P.. 2017. “Globalizing Chinese Energy Finance: The Role of Policy Banks.” Journal of Contemporary China 26(108): 834–51.Google Scholar
Konno, Hidehiro. 1998. “From Simple to Sophisticated.” In The Export Credit Arrangement: Achievements and Challenges, 1978–1998. Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
Koplitz, Shannon N., Jacob, Daniel J., Sulprizio, Melissa P., Myllyvirta, Lauri, and Reid, Colleen. 2017. “Burden of Disease from Rising Coal-Fired Power Plant Emissions in Southeast Asia.” Environmental Science & Technology 51(3): 1467–76.Google Scholar
Koremenos, Barbara, Lipson, Charles, and Snidal, Duncan. 2001. “The Rational Design of International Institutions.” International Organization 55(4): 761–99.Google Scholar
Krasner, Stephen D. 1979. “The Tokyo Round: Particularistic Interests and Prospects for Stability in the Global Trading System.” International Studies Quarterly 23(4): 491531.Google Scholar
Krasner, Stephen D. 2011. “Changing State Structures: Outside In.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 108(4): 21302–7.Google Scholar
Kroodsma, David A., Mayorga, Juan, Hochberg, Timothy, Miller, Nathan A., Boerder, Kristina, Ferretti, Francesco, Wilson, Alex, Bergman, Bjorn, White, Timothy D., Block, Barbara A., Woods, Paul, Sullivan, Brian, Costello, Christopher, and Worm, Boris. 2018. “Tracking the Global Footprint of Fisheries.” Science 359(6378): 904–8.Google Scholar
Kupchan, Charles A. 2014. “The Normative Foundations of Hegemony and the Coming Challenge to Pax Americana.” Security Studies 23(2): 219–57.Google Scholar
Lake, David A. 2009. Hierarchy in International Relations. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Lake, David A. 2014. “The Challenge: The Domestic Determinants of International Rivalry between the United States and China.” International Studies Review 16(3): 442–47.Google Scholar
Lardy, Nicholas R. 2000. “Permanent Normal Trade Relations for China.” Brookings Institution, Policy Brief No. 58. May 2000.Google Scholar
Lardy, Nicholas R. 2004. Integrating China into the Global Economy. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.Google Scholar
Larik, Joris, and Singh, Abhijit. 2017. “Sustainability in Oceans Governance: Small Islands, Emerging Powers, and Connecting Regions.” Global Policy 8(2): 213–15.Google Scholar
Layne, Christopher. 2009. “The Waning of US Hegemony—Myth or Reality? A Review Essay.” International Security 34(1): 147–72.Google Scholar
Layne, Christopher. 2018. “The US–Chinese Power Shift and the End of the Pax Americana.” International Affairs 94(1): 89111.Google Scholar
Lazonick, William. 2008. “Entrepreneurial Ventures and the Developmental State.” Helsinki: UNU-WIDER, Discussion Paper No. 2008/01.Google Scholar
Lesage, Dries, and Van de Graaf, Thijs (eds.) 2015. Rising Powers and Multilateral Institutions. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Levit, Janet Koven. 2004. “The Dynamics of International Trade Finance Regulation: The Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credit.” Harvard International Law Journal 45:65182.Google Scholar
Lin, Justin, and Chang, Ha-Joon. 2009. “Should Industrial Policy in Developing Countries Conform to Comparative Advantage or Defy it? A Debate between Justin Lin and Ha-Joon Chang.” Development Policy Review 27(5): 483502.Google Scholar
Littlecott, Chris. 2015. “Restricting Export Credit Finance for Coal Power Plants.” E3G Briefing Paper. November 2015.Google Scholar
Lu, Xiankun. 2015. “Shifting Weights and Balances within the WTO in a Changing Global Trading Landscape.” Bridges Africa 4(9).Google Scholar
Lundestad, Geir. 1990. The American “Empire.” Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Lynch, D. 2015. China’s Futures: PRC Elites Debate Economics, Politics, and Foreign Policy. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
McCauley, Douglas J., Jablonicky, Caroline, Allison, Edward H., Golden, Christopher D., Joyce, Francis H., Mayorga, Juan, and Kroodsma, David. 2018. “Wealthy Countries Dominate Industrial Fishing.” Science Advances 4(8).Google Scholar
McCright, Aaron M., and Dunlap, Riley E.. 2014. “Defeating Kyoto: The Conservative Movement’s Impact on US Climate Change Policy.Social Problems 50(3): 348–73.Google Scholar
McMichael, Phillip. 2012. Development and Social Change: A Global Perspective. Thousand Oaks, CA: Pine Forge Press.Google Scholar
Mahrenbach, Laura Carsten. 2013. The Trade Policy of Emerging Powers: Strategic Choices of Brazil and India. New York: Palgrave.Google Scholar
Maier, Charles S. 2002. “An American Empire?” Harvard Magazine. November/December 2002.Google Scholar
Mallory, Tabitha Grace. 2013. “China’s Distant Water Fishing Industry: Policies and Implications.” Marine Policy 38: 99108.Google Scholar
Mallory, Tabitha Grace. 2015. “Preparing for the Ocean Century: China’s Changing Political Institutions for Ocean Governance and Maritime Development.” Issues & Studies 51(2): 111–38.Google Scholar
Mallory, Tabitha Grace. 2016. “Fisheries Subsidies in China: Quantitative and Qualitative Assessment of Policy Coherence and Effectiveness.” Marine Policy 68: 7482.Google Scholar
Mansfield, Edward D. 2014. “Rising Powers in the Global Economy: Issues and Questions.” International Studies Review 16(3): 437–42.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E. 2010. “Whistling to the Same Tune? The Contest over Future WTO Agricultural Subsidies.” In Govinda Reddy, A. (ed.) Agriculture Subsidies and the WTO. Hyderabad: Amicus Books: 3444.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E. 2014. “Trading Out of the Global Food Crisis? The World Trade Organization and the Geopolitics of Food Security.” Geopolitics 19(2): 322–50.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E. 2016. “The Forgotten History of Food Security in Multilateral Trade Negotiations.” World Trade Review 16(1): 2557.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E. (ed.) 2017. The Global Political Economy of Raúl Prebisch. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E. 2018. “Negotiating from the Margins: How the UN Shapes the Rules of the WTO.” Review of International Political Economy 25(3): 364–91.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E. 2019. “A New Grey Zone in Global Trade Governance? Recent Developments on Food Security at the World Trade Organization.” In Drache, Daniel and Jacobs, Lesley A. (eds.) Crises and Resilience in International Economic Law: Global Governance and Policy Spaces. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press.Google Scholar
Margulis, Matias E., and Porter, Tony. 2013. “Governing the Global Land Grab: Multipolarity, Ideas, and Complexity in Transnational Governance.” Globalizations 10(1): 6586.Google Scholar
Mastanduno, M. 2009. “System Maker and Privilege Taker: US Power and the International Political Economy.” World Politics 61(1): 121.Google Scholar
Mathiesen, Karl. 2016. “UN Tells Bangladesh to Halt Mangrove-Threatening Coal Plant.” The Guardian. October 19, 2016.Google Scholar
Maurer, C., and Nakhooda, S.. 2003. “Transition from Fossil to Renewable Energy Systems: What Role for Export Credit Agencies?” World Resources Institute Policy Brief. December 2003.Google Scholar
Mera, Carlos. 2017. “China’s Selling May Keep Food Prices Low This Year.” Financial Times. Beyond BRICS Blog. January 31, 2017.Google Scholar
Meyer, Gregory, and Terazono, Emiko. 2014. “Cotton Farmers Feel a Chill in the Market as Prices Wear Thin.” Financial Times. December 14, 2014.Google Scholar
MOFCOM (Ministry of Commerce). 2016. “Official of the Department and Treaty and Law Comments on the US Appealing to the WTO against China’s Agricultural Support Policies.” Ministry of Commerce, China. September 15, 2016.Google Scholar
Moravcsik, Andrew M. 1989. “Disciplining Trade Finance: The OECD Export Credit Arrangement.” International Organization 43(1): 173205.Google Scholar
Mortensen, Jens L. 2006. “The WTO and the Governance of Globalization: Dismantling the Compromise of Embedded Liberalism?” In Stubbs, Richard and Underhill, Geoffrey (eds.) Political Economy and the Changing Global Order. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press: 170–82.Google Scholar
Morton, Katherine. 2017. “Learning by Doing: The Global Governance of Food Security.” In Kennedy, Scott (ed.) The Dragon’s Learning Curve: Global Governance and China. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Muzaka, Valbona, and Bishop, Matthew Louis. 2014. “Doha Stalemate: The End of Trade Multilateralism?Review of International Studies 41(2): 383406.Google Scholar
NAM (National Association of Manufacturers). 2008. “NAMA Sectorals Essential for Balanced Outcomes.” Press Release. July 28, 2008.Google Scholar
NAM 2014. The Global Export Credit Dimension: The Size of Foreign Export Credit Agencies Compared to the Export–Import Bank of the United States. Washington, DC: National Association of Manufacturers. www.nam.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Global-Export-Credit.pdf.Google Scholar
Narlikar, Amrita. 2013. “Negotiating the Rise of New Powers.” International Affairs 89(3): 561–76.Google Scholar
Narlikar, Amrita. 2017. “India’s Role in Global Governance: A Modi-fication?International Affairs 93(1): 132–11.Google Scholar
Narlikar, Amrita, and Tussie, Diana. 2004. “The G20 at the Cancun Ministerial: Developing Countries and Their Evolving Coalitions in the WTO.” World Economy 27(7): 947–66.Google Scholar
Narlikar, Amrita, and Tussie, Diana. 2016. “Breakthrough at Bali? Explanations, Aftermath, Implications.” International Negotiation 21(2): 209–32.Google Scholar
Narlikar, Amrita, and Wilkinson, Rorden. 2004. “Collapse at the WTO: A Cancun Post-Mortem.” Third World Quarterly 25(3): 447–60.Google Scholar
Netherlands. 2014. “Joint Statement by the United States and the Netherlands on Climate Change and Financing the Transition to Low-Carbon Investments Abroad.” March 24, 2014.Google Scholar
New York Times. 2017. “China Wants Fish, So Africa Goes Hungry.” New York Times. Editorial. May 3, 2017.Google Scholar
Newman, Jesse, and McGroarty, Patrick. 2017. “Plowed Under—The Next Farm Bust Is Upon Us.” Wall Street Journal. February 8, 2017.Google Scholar
Nölke, Andreas, ten Brink, Tobias, Claar, Simone, and May, Christian. 2015. “Domestic Structures, Foreign Economic Policies and Global Economic Order: Implications from the Rise of Large Emerging Economies.” European Journal of International Relations 21(3): 538–67.Google Scholar
Norrlof, Carla. 2014. “Dollar Hegemony: A Power Analysis.” Review of International Political Economy 21(5): 1042–70.Google Scholar
NRDC. 2016a. “Carbon Trap: How International Coal Finance Undermines the Paris Agreement.” Natural Resources Defense Council. November 14, 2016.Google Scholar
NRDC. 2016b. “International Coal and Renewables Financing and Climate Change.” National Resources Development Council. November 4, 2016.Google Scholar
NRDC. 2017. “Power Shift: Shifting G20 International Public Finance from Coal to Renewables.” Natural Resources Defense Council. December 3, 2017.Google Scholar
NRDC, OCI, and WWF. 2015. “Under the Rug: How Governments and International Institutions are Hiding Billions to Support the Coal Industry.” National Resources Defense Council, Oil Change International and World Wildlife Fund for Nature. June 2, 2015.Google Scholar
Nye, Joseph S. 2015. Is the American Century Over? Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Nye, Joseph S. 2012. “The Twenty-First Century Will Not Be a ‘Post-American’ World.International Studies Quarterly 56(1): 215–17.Google Scholar
OA. 2010. “Chinese Activities in Eastern Europe—Success through Market-Aggressive Financing Offers.” Position Paper. Ost-Ausschuss der Deutschen Wirtschaft (German Eastern Business Association).Google Scholar
OCI and WWF. 2015. “Hidden Costs: Pollution from Coal Power Financed by OECD Countries.” Oil Change International and World Wildlife Fund for Nature. November 2015. http://priceofoil.org/content/uploads/2015/11/Hidden-Costs-of-Coal-Economic-Costs-of-OECD-Coal-Finance.pdf.Google Scholar
ODI and Oxfam. 2015. “Speaking Truth to Power: Why Energy Distribution, More than Generation, Is Africa’s Poverty Reduction Challenge.” Overseas Development Institute and Oxfam. May 2015.Google Scholar
OECD. (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) 2011. Smart Rules for Fair Trade: 50 Years of Export Credits. Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
OECD. 2013. Perspectives on Global Development 2013: Industrial Policies in a Changing World. Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
OECD. 2014a. “Data on Export Credit Support for Fossil Fuel Power Plants and Fossil Fuel Extraction Projects.” Room Document No. 1, Paris. October 9, 2014.Google Scholar
OECD. 2014b. “Revised Sector Understanding on Export Credits for Renewable Energy, Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation, and Water Projects.” (TAD/PG(2014)4).Google Scholar
OECD. 2015a. “Sector Understanding on Export Credits for Coal-Fired Electricity Generation Projects.” (TAD/PG(2015)9/FINAL).Google Scholar
OECD. 2015b. “Statement from Participants to the Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits.” November 18, 2015.Google Scholar
OECD. 2016. “Review of Members’ Responses to the Environmental and Social Survey.” (TAD/ECG(2015)17/FINAL).Google Scholar
OECD. 2017a. Agricultural Policy Monitoring and Evaluation. Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
OECD. 2017b. OECD Review of Fisheries: Policies and Summary Statistics. Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
OECD. 2018a. “Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits.” (TAD/PG(2018)1).Google Scholar
OECD. 2018b. “Trends in Arrangement Official Export Credits.” January 16, 2018.Google Scholar
Orden, D. 2013. “The Changing Implications of Domestic Support and Its Implications for Trade.” Canadian Agricultural Trade Policy and Competitiveness Research Network (CATPRN). Commissioned Paper 2013-02. https://ageconsearch.umn.edu/record/146657/files/Commissioned%20paper%202013-02%20Orden%20final.pdf.Google Scholar
Ostry, Sylvia. 2007. “Trade, Development, and the Doha Development Agenda.” In Lee, Donna and Wilkinson, Rorden (eds.) The WTO after Hong Kong: Progress in, and Prospects for, the Doha Development Agenda. New York: Routledge: 248–61.Google Scholar
Oxfam. 2002. “Rigged Rules and Double Standards: Trade, Globalization and the Fight against Poverty.” Make Trade Fair Campaign. Sustainable Agriculture and Natural Resource Management (SANREM) Knowledgebase. https://vtechworks.lib.vt.edu/handle/10919/65754.Google Scholar
Oxfam. 2005. “A Round for Free: How Rich Countries Are Getting a Free Ride on Agricultural Subsidies at the WTO.” Oxfam Briefing Paper No. 76. June 15, 2005.Google Scholar
Oxfam. 2017. “By the Numbers: Too Many People Still Live in the Dark.” October 20, 2017. https://politicsofpoverty.oxfamamerica.org/2017/10/by-the-numbers-too-many-people-still-live-in-the-dark/.Google Scholar
Panich, Leo, and Gindin, Sam. 2012. The Making of Global Capitalism: The Political Economy of American Empire. New York: Verso.Google Scholar
Patrick, S. 2010. “Irresponsible Stakeholders? The Difficulty of Integrating Rising Powers.” Foreign Affairs 89(6): 4455.Google Scholar
Paul, T. V. 2016a. Accommodating Rising Powers: Past, Present, and Future. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Paul, T. V. 2016b. “The Accommodation of Rising Powers in World Politics.” In Paul, T. V. (ed.) Accommodating Rising Powers: Past, Present, and Future. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 332.Google Scholar
Pearson, Margaret. 2019. “China and Global Climate Change Governance.” In Zeng, Ka (ed.) Handbook on the International Political Economy of China. Cheltenham: Edward Elgar: 411–23.Google Scholar
Pinto, Sanjay, Macdonald, Kate, and Marshall, Shelley. 2011. “Rethinking Global Market Governance.” Politics & Society 39(3): 299314.Google Scholar
Pisano, G. P., and Shih, W. C.. 2012. Producing Prosperity: Why America Needs a Manufacturing Renaissance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business Press Books.Google Scholar
Pomfret, John. 2010. “China Invests Heavily in Brazil, Elsewhere in Pursuit of Political Heft.” Washington Post. July 26, 2010: A01.Google Scholar
Porter, Tony. 2005. “The United States in International Trade Politics: Liberal Leader or Heavy-Handed Hegemon?” in Kelly, Dominic and Grant, Wyn (eds.) The Politics of International Trade in the Twenty-First Century. New York: Palgrave Macmillan: 204–20.Google Scholar
Potts, Jason, Lu, Xiankun, Voora, Vivek, and Lynch, Matthew. 2017. “Greening China’s Seafood Value Chain.” A Case Study for the CCICED Special Policy Study on China’s Role in Greening Global Value Chains.Google Scholar
Quark, Amy A. 2013. Global Rivalries: Standards Wars and the Transnational Cotton Trade. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.Google Scholar
Rabobank. 2016. “Rabobank: Global Food Prices Set to Stay Low in 2017.” Global Outlook Report. November 23, 2016. www.rabobank.com/en/press/search/2016/20161123-rabobank-global-food-prices-set-to-stay-low-in-2017.html.Google Scholar
Rachman, Gideon. 2016. Easternisation: War and Peace in the Asian Century. London: Random House.Google Scholar
Raghavan, Chakravathi. 2000. “After Seattle, World Trading System Faces Uncertain Future.” Review of International Political Economy 7(3): 495504.Google Scholar
Ravi Kanth, D. 2016. “US Strikes Another Body Blow to WTO System at Rules Talks.” South North Development Monitor 8274. July 1, 2016.Google Scholar
Reddy, Sudeep. 2011. “US Export Terms Pose Test for Beijing.” Wall Street Journal. January 12, 2011.Google Scholar
Reinert, Erik S. 2007. How Rich Countries Got Rich … And Why Poor Countries Stay Poor. New York: Carroll & Graf.Google Scholar
Reuters. 2015. “Rich Nations’ Fossil Fuel Export Funding Dwarfs Green Spend: Documents.” March 30, 2015.Google Scholar
Reuters. 2017a. “China Makes WTO Offer on Fishery Subsidies, But Bait Not Taken.” November 1, 2017.Google Scholar
Reuters. 2017b. “Eight Chinese Vessels Detained off West Africa for Illegal Fishing.” May 3, 2017.Google Scholar
Reuters. 2017c. “Senegal Detains Seven Chinese Trawling Boats for Illegal Fishing.” June 10, 2017.Google Scholar
Ruggie, John Gerard. 1982. “International Regimes, Transactions, and Change: Embedded Liberalism in the Postwar Economic Order.” International Organization 36(2): 379415.Google Scholar
Ruggie, John Gerard. 1996. Constructing the World Polity: Essays on International Institutionalization. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Ruggie, John Gerard, and Nelson, Tamaryn. 2015. “Human Rights and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises: Normative Innovations and Implementation Challenges.” Brown Journal of World Affairs 22(1): 99127.Google Scholar
Sala, Enric, Mayorga, Juan, Costello, Christopher, Kroodsma, David, Palomares, Maria L. D., Pauly, Daniel, Sumaila, U. Rashid, and Zeller, Dirk. 2018. “The Economics of Fishing the High Seas.” Science Advances 4(6).Google Scholar
Sanderson, H., and Forsythe, M.. 2012. China’s Superbank: Debt, Oil and Influence—How China Development Bank is Rewriting the Rules of Finance. Singapore: Wiley.Google Scholar
Sauvé, Pierre, and Stern, Robert Mitchell. 2010. GATS 2000: New Directions in Services Trade Liberalization. Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.Google Scholar
Schaper, M. 2007. “Leveraging Green Power: Environmental Rules for Project Finance.” Business & Politics 9(3): 127.Google Scholar
Schewel, Matthew. 2011a. “Ex-Im Chief Sees Chinese Willingness to Adhere to Export Credit Rules.” Inside US–China Trade 11(20).Google Scholar
Schewel, Matthew. 2011b. “Hockberg: Ex-Im Matched Chinese Financing in GE Pakistan Train Deal.” Inside US–China Trade 11(3).Google Scholar
Schrank, Andrew, and Whitford, Josh. 2009. “Industrial Policy in the United States: A Neo-Polanyian Interpretation.” Politics & Society 37(4): 521–53.Google Scholar
Schuhbauer, Anna, Chuenpagdee, Ratana, Cheung, William W. L., Greer, Krista, and Sumaila, U. Rashid. 2017. “How Subsidies Affect the Economic Viability of Small-Scale Fisheries.” Marine Policy 82: 114–21.Google Scholar
Schvartzman, Milko. 2016. “Argentina’s Patience Snaps on China’s Illegal Fishing.” China Dialogue. May 20, 2016.Google Scholar
Schwab, Susan C. 2011. “After Doha: Why the Negotiations Are Doomed and What We Should Do about It.” Foreign Affairs 90(3): 104–17.Google Scholar
Schweller, Randall. 2011. “Emerging Powers in an Age of Disorder.” Global Governance 17(3): 285–97.Google Scholar
Scott, James. 2017. “The Future of Agricultural Trade Governance in the World Trade Organization.” International Affairs 93(5): 1167–84.Google Scholar
Scott, James, and Wilkinson, Rorden. 2013. “China Threat? Evidence from the WTO.” Journal of World Trade 47(4): 761–82.Google Scholar
SEFA. 2017. Energizing Finance: Scaling and Refining Finance in Countries with Large Energy Access Gaps. Washington, DC: Sustainable Energy for All.Google Scholar
Sell, Susan. 2002. Private Power, Public Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Sell, Susan. 2006. “Big Business, the WTO, and Development: Uruguay and Beyond.” In Stubbs, Richard and Underhill, Geoffrey (eds.) Political Economy and the Changing Global Order. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press: 183–96.Google Scholar
Sen, Amiti. 2018. “India, China Warn Members against Hurried Negotiations on Fisheries Subsidies at WTO.” The Hindu. Business Line. April 23, 2018. www.thehindubusinessline.com/news/world/india-china-warn-members-against-hurried-negotiations-on-fisheries-subsidies-at-wto/article23650220.ece#.Google Scholar
Shadlen, Kennneth C. 2005. “Exchanging Development for Market Access: Deep Integration and Industrial Policy under Multilateral and Regional-Bilateral Trade Agreements.” Review of International Political Economy 12(5): 750–75.Google Scholar
Shaffer, Gregory. 2018. “A Tragedy in the Making? The Decline of Law and the Return of Power in International Trade Relations.” Yale Journal of International Law 44(37): 3753.Google Scholar
Shaffer, Gregory, and Gao, Henry. 2018. “China’s Rise: How It Took on the US at the WTO.” University of Illinois Law Review (1): 115–84.Google Scholar
Shaffer, Gregory, Wolfe, Robert, and Le, Vinhcent. 2015. “Can Informal Law Discipline Subsidies?Journal of International Economic Law 18(4): 711–41.Google Scholar
Shambaugh, David. 2013. China Goes Global: The Partial Power. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Sharma, Ruchir. 2012. “Broken BRICs: Why the Rest Stopped Rising.” Foreign Affairs 91(6): 27.Google Scholar
Shearer, Christine, Ghio, Nicole, Myllyvirta, Lauri, Yu, Aiqun, and Nace, Ted. 2017. Boom and Bust: Tracking the Global Coal Pipeline. Coal Swarm, Sierra Club, and Greenpeace USA. March 2017. www.sierraclub.org/sites/www.sierraclub.org/files/uploads-wysiwig/BoomBust2017-English-EMBARGO-MARCH-22.pdf.Google Scholar
Sherwin, Kara. 2016. “China Is Outsourcing Its Pollution.” Foreign Policy. December 7, 2016.Google Scholar
Singh, J. P. 2014. “The Land of Milk and Cotton: How US Protectionism Distorts Global Trade.” Foreign Affairs. Snapshot. October 23, 2014.Google Scholar
Singh, J. P. 2017. Sweet Talk: Paternalism and Collective Action in North–South Trade Relations. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Singh, J. P., and Gupta, Surupa. 2016. “Agriculture and Its Discontents: Coalitional Politics at the WTO with Special Reference to India’s Food Security Interests.” International Negotiation 21(2): 295326.Google Scholar
Skarp, Lennart. 2015. “Chinese Export Credit Policies and Programmes.” OECD, Working Party on Export Credits and Credit Guarantees (TAD/ECG(2015)3). March 16, 2015.Google Scholar
Slaughter, Anne-Marie. 2009. “America’s Edge.” Foreign Affairs 88(1): 94113.Google Scholar
Sneyd, Adam. 2016. Cotton. Cambridge: Polity.Google Scholar
Snyder, Quddus Z. 2011. “Integrating Rising Powers: Liberal Systemic Theory and the Mechanism of Competition.” Review of International Studies 39(1): 209–31.Google Scholar
Stein, Arthur A. 1982. “Coordination and Collaboration: Regimes in an Anarchic World.” International Organization 36(2): 299324.Google Scholar
Steinberg, Richard. 2002. “In the Shadow of Law or Power? Consensus-Based Bargaining in the GATT/WTO.” International Organization 56(2): 339–74.Google Scholar
Stephen, Matthew D. 2014. “Rising Powers, Global Capitalism and Liberal Global Governance: A Historical Materialist Account of the BRICs Challenge.” European Journal of International Relations 20(4): 912–38.Google Scholar
Stiglitz, Joseph E., Esteban, J., and Lin, J. Y.. 2013. The Industrial Policy Revolution I: The Role of Government beyond Ideology. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Stiglitz, Joseph E., and Greenwald, Bruce C.. 2014. Creating a Learning Society: A New Approach to Growth, Development, and Social Progress. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Stuenkel, Oliver. 2015. The BRICS and the Future of Global Order. London: Lexington Books.Google Scholar
Subacchi, Paola. 2008. “New Power Centres and New Power Brokers: Are They Shaping a New Economic Order?International Affairs 84(3): 485–98.Google Scholar
Subramanian, A. 2011. “The Inevitable Superpower: Why China’s Dominance Is a Sure Thing.” Foreign Affairs 90(5): 66.Google Scholar
Sumaila, U. Rashid, Bellmann, Christophe, and Tipping, Alice. 2014. “Fishing for the Future: Trends in Global Fisheries Trade.” E15 Initiative. ICTSD and World Economic Forum. http://e15initiative.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/02/E15_Fisheries_BP_Sumaila-Bellmann-Tipping_FINAL.pdf.Google Scholar
Sumaila, U. Rashid, Lam, Vicky, Le Manach, Frédéric, Swartz, Wilf, and Pauly, Daniel. 2013. Global Fisheries Subsidies. Brussels: European Parliament Directorate-General for Internal Policies.Google Scholar
Tabuchi, Hiroko. 2017. “As Beijing Joins Climate Fight, Chinese Companies Build Coal Plants.” New York Times. July 1, 2017.Google Scholar
Tipping, Alice. 2017. “Tackling Fisheries Subsidies at the WTO: What’s in It for LDCs?Bridges Africa 6(8).Google Scholar
Tipping, Alice. 2018. “Overview: Building Comprehensive and Effective WTO Rules on Fisheries Subsidies.” In Fisheries Subsidies Rules at the WTO: A Compilation of Evidence and Analysis. Geneva: International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development.Google Scholar
Trade Finance. 2014. “Asia’s Necessary Evil.” April 7, 2014. https://tradefinanceanalytics.com/articles/3328231/asias-necessary-evil.Google Scholar
Trade Finance. 2015. “New OECD Rule Limits ECA Coal-Fired Power Funding.” November 19, 2015. https://tradefinanceanalytics.com/articles/3492282/new-oecd-rule-limits-eca-coal-fired-power-funding.Google Scholar
Trommer, Silke. 2014. Transformations in Trade Politics: Participatory Trade Politics in West Africa. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Trommer, Silke. 2017. “The WTO in an Era of Preferential Trade Agreements: Thick and Thin Institutions in Global Trade Governance.” World Trade Review 16(3): 501–26.Google Scholar
Tvardek, Steven. 2011. “Smart Aid Rules for Development, Not Export Promotion.” In Smart Rules for Fair Trade: 50 Years of Export Credits. Paris: OECD: 208–14.Google Scholar
Ueno, Takahiro, Yanagi, Miki, and Nakano, Jane. 2014. “Quantifying Chinese Public Financing for Foreign Coal Power Plants.” University of Tokyo, GrasSPP Working Paper.Google Scholar
Umbach, Frank, and Yu, Ka-ho. 2016. “China’s Expanding Overseas Coal Power Industry: New Strategic Opportunities, Commercial Risks, Climate Challenges and Geopolitical Implications.” European Centre for Energy and Resource Security (EUCERS) Strategy Paper 11, Department of War Studies, King’s College, London.Google Scholar
UNCTAD. 2016. “The 2014 US Farm Bill and its Implications for Cotton Producers in Low-Income Developing Countries.” UN Conference on Trade and Development, Geneva.Google Scholar
UNCTAD-FAO-UNEP. 2016. “Regulating Fisheries Subsidies Must be an Integral Part of the Implementation of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.” UNCTAD-FAO-UNEP Joint Statement, Fourteenth Session of the United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, Nairobi. July 20, 2016.Google Scholar
UNEP. 2011. Fisheries Subsidies, Sustainable Development and the WTO. New York: United Nations Environment Programme.Google Scholar
UNESCO. 2016. “Education for People and Planet: Creating Sustainable Futures for All.” Global Education Monitoring Report.Google Scholar
United States. 2000a. “China’s WTO Accession: Trade Interests, Values and Strategy.” Speech by US Trade Representative Charlene Barshefsky, National Conference of State Legislators, Washington, DC. February 4, 2000.Google Scholar
United States. 2000b. “A Strategy for the Future: US–China Relations and China’s WTO Accession.” Speech by Stanley O. Roth, Assistant Secretary for East Asian and Pacific Affairs, US Department of State, Washington State China Relations Council, Washington, DC. April 5, 2000.Google Scholar
United States. 2008. “Senate Committee on Finance Press Release: Finance, Ways and Means Leaders Urge President to Stand Firm on Doha Round.” December 2, 2008.Google Scholar
United States. 2011. “2011 Trade Policy Agenda and 2010 Annual Report.” Executive Office of the President. https://ustr.gov/2011_trade_policy_agenda.Google Scholar
United States. 2013a. “Export–Import Bank Board Adopts Revised Environmental Guidelines to Reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions.” Press Release, US Export–Import Bank, Washington, DC. December 12, 2013.Google Scholar
United States. 2013b. “Guidance for US Positions on MDBs Engaging with Developing Countries on Coal-Fired Power Generation.” Department of Treasury. October 29, 2013.Google Scholar
United States. 2013c. “Joint Statement by Kingdom of Denmark, Republic of Finland, Republic of Iceland, Kingdom of Norway, Kingdom of Sweden, and the United States of America.” White House Press Release. September 4.Google Scholar
United States. 2013d. “The President’s Climate Action Plan.” Executive Office of the President. June 2013.Google Scholar
United States. 2015a. “Under Secretary of the US Department of the Treasury Nathan Sheets Written Statement to the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, Subcommittee on Health Care, Benefits, and Administrative Rules, and House Financial Services Committee, Subcommittee on Monetary Policy and Trade.” US Congress, Washington, DC. April 15, 2015.Google Scholar
United States. 2015b. “US–China Joint Presidential Statement on Climate Change.” White House Press Release. September 25, 2015.Google Scholar
United States. 2016a. “Deputy Assistant Secretary for East Asia Abraham M. Denmark Holds a Press Briefing in the Pentagon Briefing Room.” Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for East Asia Abraham M. Denmark, US Department of Defense, Transcript. May 13, 2016.Google Scholar
United States. 2016b. “United States Challenges Chinese Grain Tariff Rate Quotas for Rice, Wheat, and Corn.” US Trade Representative, Press Release. June 26, 2016.Google Scholar
United States. 2016c. “United States Challenges Excessive Chinese Support for Rice, Wheat, and Corn.” US Trade Representative, Press Release. September 6, 2016.Google Scholar
US Chamber of Commerce. 2016. Cultivating Opportunity: The Benefits of Increased U.S.–China Agricultural Trade. Washington, DC.Google Scholar
USDA (United States Department of Agriculture). 2015a. “China Grain and Feed Annual—2015.” GAIN Report Number CH15014, Foreign Agricultural Service. May 8, 2015.Google Scholar
USDA 2015b. “Cotton Policy in China.” Report from the Economic Research Service. CWS-15c-01. March 2015.Google Scholar
USDA 2015c. “The Importance of Agriculture Exports to US Trade and the Farm Economy.” Financial Conduct Authority Economic Report. September 9, 2015.Google Scholar
USDA 2016a. “China and Hong Kong: Challenges and Opportunities.” USDA Foreign Agricultural Service, International Agricultural Trade Reports. September 6, 2016.Google Scholar
USDA 2016b. “India Agricultural Trade: Expanding Export Opportunities Amid Persistent Limitations.” USDA Foreign Agricultural Service, International Agricultural Trade Report. December 21, 2016.Google Scholar
USDA 2018. “Northeastern Region 2017 Farms and Land in Farms Summary.” Farms and Land in Farms Report. National Agricultural Statistics Service. February 21, 2018Google Scholar
USTR. 2017. Report to Congress on China’s WTO Compliance. Washington, DC: US Trade Representative.Google Scholar
VanGrasstek, Craig. 2013. The History and Future of the World Trade Organization. Geneva: World Trade Organization.Google Scholar
Vassard, Jan. 2015. “A Global Regime for Export Credits in the New World (Dis)Order—Challenges of Multipolarity.” In The Future of Foreign Trade Support—Setting Global Standards for Export Credit and Political Risk Insurance. Global Policy. e-book. www.globalpolicyjournal.com/blog/author/the-future-of-foreign-trade-support.Google Scholar
Vestergaard, Jakob, and Wade, Robert H.. 2015. “Still in the Woods: Gridlock in the IMF and the World Bank Puts Multilateralism at Risk.” Global Policy 6(1): 112.Google Scholar
Wade, Robert H. 2003. “What Strategies are Viable for Developing Countries Today? The World Trade Organization and the Shrinking of ‘Development Space’.” Review of International Political Economy 10(4): 621–44.Google Scholar
Wade, Robert H. 2017. “The West Remains on Top, Economically and Politically.” In Margulis, Matias E. (ed.) The Global Political Economy of Raúl Prebisch. New York: Routledge: 135–52.Google Scholar
Walt, Stephen M. 2011. “The End of the American Era.” National Interest (116): 616.Google Scholar
Warwick, Ken. 2013. “Beyond Industrial Policy: Emerging Issues and New Trends.” OECD Science, Technology and Industry Policy Papers No. 2, Paris: OECD.Google Scholar
Warwick Commission. 2008. The Multilateral Trade Regime: Which Way Forward? Coventry: University of Warwick.Google Scholar
Washington Post. 2015. “In a Major Step on the Road to Paris, Rich Countries Agree to Slash Export Subsidies for Coal Plants.” November 18, 2015.Google Scholar
WEF (World Economic Forum). 2016. “Renewable Infrastructure Investment Handbook: A Guide for Institutional Investors.” December 2016. www3.weforum.org/docs/WEF_Renewable_Infrastructure_Investment_Handbook.pdf.Google Scholar
Weiss, Linda. 2005. “Global Governance, National Strategies: How Industrial States Make Room to Move under the WTO.” Review of International Political Economy 12(5): 723–49.Google Scholar
Weiss, Linda. 2014. America Inc.? Innovation and Enterprise in the National Security State. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Rorden. 2011. “Measuring the WTO’s Performance: An Alternative Account.” Global Policy 2(1): 4352.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Rorden, Hannah, Erin, and Scott, James. 2014. “The WTO in Bali: What MC9 Means for the Doha Development Agenda and Why It Matters.” Third World Quarterly 35(6): 1032–50.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Rorden, Hannah, Erin, and Scott, James. 2016. “The WTO in Nairobi: The Demise of the Doha Development Agenda and the Future of the Multilateral Trading System.” Global Policy 7(2): 247–55.Google Scholar
Wilkinson, Rorden, and Scott, James. 2008. “Developing Country Participation in the GATT: A Reassessment.” World Trade Review 7(3): 473510.Google Scholar
Williams, F. 1999. “Nations Call for Fishing Subsidy Ban.” Financial Times. August 2, 1999.Google Scholar
Wilson, Jeffrey D. 2017. “The Evolution of China’s Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: from a Revisionist to Status-Seeking Agenda.” International Relations of the Asia-Pacific 19(1): 147–76.Google Scholar
Womack, Brantly. 2016. “Asymmetric Parity: US–China Relations in a Multinodal World.” International Affairs 92(6): 1463–80.Google Scholar
Wood, Ellen Meiksins. 2005. Empire of Capital. New York: Verso.Google Scholar
World Bank. 1993. The East Asian Miracle: Economic Growth and Public Policy. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2009. The Sunken Billions. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2013. “The State of the Poor: Where are the Poor and Where are the Poorest.” www.worldbank.org/content/dam/Worldbank/document/State_of_the_poor_paper_April17.pdf.Google Scholar
World Bank. 2017. The Sunken Billions Revisited: Progress and Challenges in Global Marine Fisheries. Washington, DC: World Bank.Google Scholar
World Bank and WTO. 2015. The Role of Trade in Ending Poverty. Geneva: World Trade Organization.Google Scholar
Wright, Christopher. 2011. “Export Credit Agencies and Global Energy: Promoting National Exports in a Changing World.” Global Policy 2: 133–43.Google Scholar
WTO (World Trade Organization). 2005. “Hong Kong Ministerial Declaration.” December 22, 2005. WT/MIN(05)/DEC.Google Scholar
WTO 2008. “World Trade Report.” Geneva: World Trade Organization.Google Scholar
WTO 2015. “Minutes of Meeting, Trade Negotiations Committee.” October 5, 2015. TN/C/M/37.Google Scholar
WTO 2017a. “Report by Ambassador Stephen Karau to the Committee on Agriculture Special Session.” July 25, 2017. JOB/AG/107.Google Scholar
WTO 2017b. “World Trade Statistical Review.” www.wto.org/english/res_e/statis_e/wts2017_e/wts17_toc_e.htm.Google Scholar
WWF (World Wildlife Fund for Nature). 2007. “Fisheries Subsidies: WWF Statement on the Chairman’s Draft.” December 12, 2007. Geneva. http://assets.panda.org/downloads/wwf_stmnt_on_fish_subs_text_111207.pdf.Google Scholar
WWF 2015. “Coal Finance: Will the OECD Lag behind Emerging Countries Because of Japan?” Briefing Paper. October 2015.Google Scholar
Xiao, Ren. 2013. “Debating China’s Rise in China.” In Friedman, R., Oskanian, K., and Pardo, R. P. (eds.) After Liberalism? The Future of Liberalism in International Relations. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Yu, Wusheng. 2017. How China’s Farm Policy Reforms Could Affect Trade and Markets: A Focus on Grains and Cotton. Geneva: International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development.Google Scholar
Yue, Li. 2012. “Dynamics of Clean Coal-Fired Power Generation Development in China.” Energy Policy 51(C):138–42.Google Scholar
Zakaria, Fareed. 2008. The Post-American World. New York: Norton.Google Scholar
Zangl, Bernhard, Heußner, Frederick, Kruck, Andreas, and Lanzendörfer, Xenia. 2016. “Imperfect Adaptation: How the WTO and the IMF Adjust to Shifting Power Distributions among Their Members.” Review of International Organizations 11(2): 171–96.Google Scholar
Zeiler, Thomas W. 1999. Free Trade, Free World: The Advent of the GATT: Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press.Google Scholar
Zeiler, Thomas W. 2012. “The Expanding Mandate of the GATT: The First Seven Rounds.” In Narlikar, A., Daunton, M., and Stern, R. M. (eds.) The Oxford Handbook on The World Trade Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Zha, Daojiong, and Zhang, Hongzhou. 2013. “Food in China’s International Relations.” Pacific Review 26(5): 455–79.Google Scholar
Zhang, Hongzhou. 2016. “Chinese Fishermen in Disputed Waters: Not Quite a ‘People’s War’.” Marine Policy 68: 6573.Google Scholar
Zhang, Hongzhou, and Bateman, Sam. 2017. “Fishing Militia, the Securitization of Fishery and the South China Sea Dispute.” Contemporary Southeast Asia: A Journal of International and Strategic Affairs 39(2): 288314.Google Scholar
Zhang, Hongzhou, and Wu, Fengshi. 2017. “China’s Marine Fishery and Global Ocean Governance.” Global Policy 8(2): 216–26.Google Scholar
Zoellick, Robert. 2010. “The End of the Third World? Modernizing Multilateralism for a Multipolar World.” President of the World Bank, Speech at the Woodrow Wilson Center, Washington, DC. April 14, 2010. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/595831521623147298/The-end-of-the-third-world-modernizing-multilateralism-for-a-multipolar-world-by-Robert-B-Zoellick-President-World-Bank-Group.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • References
  • Kristen Hopewell, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
  • Book: Clash of Powers
  • Online publication: 21 January 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108877015.009
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • References
  • Kristen Hopewell, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
  • Book: Clash of Powers
  • Online publication: 21 January 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108877015.009
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • References
  • Kristen Hopewell, University of British Columbia, Vancouver
  • Book: Clash of Powers
  • Online publication: 21 January 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108877015.009
Available formats
×