International Development - First Report
Here you can browse the report together with the Proceedings of the Committee. The published report was ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 4 December 2003.
CONTENTS
Terms of Reference
REPORT
BACKGROUND AND ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
1 INTRODUCTION
2 WHAT
HAPPENED AT CANCÚN?
The collapse of the Cancún Ministerial
Before Cancún: TRIPS and public health
The implications for developing
countries
3 LEARNING
THE LESSONS OF CANCÚN
Process matters: Time, timing and organisation
Geo-politics matters: New country-groups
and the failure of brinkmanship
Substance matters most: Singapore Issues,
agriculture and cotton subsidies
The European Commission and the EU's Member
States: Mandate, communication, accountability and transparency
Governance, role and scope: The WTO and a
development round
4 REVIVING
A GENUINE DEVELOPMENT ROUND
Post-Cancún prospects: Bilateralism,
trans-atlantic relations and the peace clause
What's on the table?: The Derbez text and
the Singapore Issues
The European Union and agricultural reform
Dealing with difference: Preference erosion,
SDT and coherence
Political leadership
CONCLUSIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
GLOSSARY
FORMAL MINUTES
WITNESSES (PAGE NUMBERS REFER TO VOLUME
II)
REPORTS FROM THE INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
COMMITTEE SINCE 2001
MINUTES OF EVIDENCE - VOLUME II (HC 92-II)
WRITTEN EVIDENCE - VOLUME II (HC 92-II)
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