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NAFTA in the New Millennium

The North American Free Trade Agreement binds Canada, Mexico, and the United States together in an ambitious and far-reaching experiment in regional economic integration. As we enter the new millennium, a central concern is whether NAFTA should be amended or reformed and how it might become the foundation for a hemispheric Free Trade Area of the Americas (FTAA).

To assess these possibilities, NAFTA in the New Millennium raises key questions:
  • How has NAFTA performed and how has it affected the member countries?
  • Is there popular support for NAFTA in Canada, Mexico, and the United States?
  • What are the prospects for change in the foreseeable future and for the longer term?
  • How does NAFTA fit into the still-evolving world economy? What is its relationship to other regional integration schemes and to multilateral connections on a global scale?
NAFTA in the New Millennium
Prominent contributors from Canada, Mexico, and the United States examine broad dimensions of NAFTA's history, politics, economics, and outlooks for future development. They address such topics as:
  • The rise of "free trade" as an idea
  • Occupational status and perceptions of NAFTA
  • Immigration policy and economic integration
  • The need for a social development fund
  • Prospects for dollarization
  • The impact of 9/11/01 on regional and hemispheric trade negotiations.
Edited by Edward J. Chambers and Peter H. Smith. Co-published by The University of Alberta Press and Centre for U.S.-Mexican Studies, University of California, San Diego, 2002.
   
Catalogue No. 0-88864-386-1
Price $34.95
Format Softcover
Pages 504
Language English only
 
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Last modified: November 10, 2003

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