Collective ClientelismCollective Clientelism |
Contents
Introduction | 1 |
From Rome to Lomé | 47 |
STABEX and SYSMIN | 99 |
Commercial Cooperation | 151 |
Trade Between the EEC and the ACP During | 185 |
The Political Economy | 219 |
Quotas | 227 |
Industrial Cooperation | 253 |
Financial and Technical Cooperation | 275 |
Conclusions | 309 |
Other editions - View all
Collective Clientelism: The Lomé Conventions and North-South Relations John Ravenhill No preview available - 1985 |
Common terms and phrases
ACP countries ACP exports ACP Group ACP share ACP sugar ACP-EEC Council African agreement agricultural Associates bananas bargaining beet benefits bilateral aid Cameroon capita clientelist collective clientelism colonies Commission commitment commodities Commonwealth ACP Community market Community's coun Council of Ministers Decline developing countries domestic EAMA EEC imports EEC share effect enjoyed European Community European market export earnings favor financing France French funds Gabon groundnut Group of 77 guaranteed increase industrial cooperation interests international economic investment Ivory Coast LDCs least developed Lomé Convention Lomé relationship memorandum ment minerals munity negotiations Nigeria patron percent political preferential principal projects proposals Protocol quotas regime relations result rules of origin scheme sector Senegal significant STABEX STABEX transfers strategy of collective SYSMIN TABLE Tanzania tariff Third World tion tonnes trade Treaty of Rome Yaoundé Conventions Zaire Zambia
References to this book
Multilateralism and the World Trade Organisation: The Architecture and ... Rorden Wilkinson No preview available - 2002 |
Strategies for Sustainable Development: Experiences from the Pacific John D. Overton,Regina Scheyvens No preview available - 1999 |