OVERVIEW
"Coming from a NGO perspective, this course helped me think differently about how the government, private, and nonprofit sectors can and should work together successfully on trade policy issues. The case studies and video conferences were very illuminating in this regard because they conveyed the dynamics of real-world scenarios."
- Samar Verma, Senior Policy Advisor, Oxfam GB, Participant 2007The Practice of Trade Policy: Economics, Negotiations, and Rules is designed to enable trade practitioners at all levels to analyze, formulate, negotiate, and implement effective policies and practices in the field of trade.
The program will give participants:
- An enhanced understanding of the economic underpinnings of trade policy.
- An advanced skill set in negotiations.
- A deeper knowledge of the institutions and rules of international trade.
- The capacity to integrate theory and practice in all of these areas.
Globalization has made trade policy a more prominent and complex sphere of public policy. Policymakers, analysts, business people, and activists must deal simultaneously with initiatives at the national, bilateral, regional, and multilateral levels.
Trade policy itself has also become more complex. No longer confined to tariffs and quotas, it is inextricably linked to a nation’s social and environmental policies, as well as the country’s overall development strategy. Current hot-button issues include technological frontiers in intellectual property rights, biotechnology and genetically modified organisms, and the need to make the system more conducive to economic development.
This program offers a practical approach to trade policy that emphasizes the core competencies of successful practitioners as well as the latest political and policy developments in the field.