trade, economics, justice?

Fundamental to sustainable and just globalisation, questions of economics, finance and trade are too serious for rhetoric. OpenDemocracy debates and articles get to the heart of the most difficult questions.
Monday 19th October

Killing aid

The anti-aid argument is too crude, says Chola Mukanga
Thursday 26th March

The curse of commodities

Oil-fuelled growth with child prostitution in Timor-Leste
Tuesday 11th September

If shirts could speak and 'we the people' would listen

Engagement, anger and love from a business pioneer (archive)
Wednesday 15th August

Debtonation: how globalisation dies

The global financial crisis exposes the failure of the economic model that rules the world

Monday 13th August

The end of gentlemanly capitalism

The global financial panic is not just an institutional wobble: it reveals a system-crisis
Thursday 29th March

Brazil, the United States and ethanol

Biofuel production could offer Brasilia and Washington a source of partnership rather than of conflict, says Rodrigo de Almeida.
Friday 19th January

How to ease global inequality: Branko Milanovic interviewed

The World Bank economist talks to openDemocracy about globalisation, inequality and labour mobility.
Sunday 16th July

Wealth versus health - the Thai frontier

Affordable drugs are crucial for fighting AIDS in developing countries, but the United States puts their availability at risk through its harsh trade agreements. Will Thailand stop the US in its tracks, and help protect access to life-saving treatments for citizens worldwide?
Monday 3rd July

Gleneagles, 7/7 and Africa

The effect of the London bombs was to aid the powerful and damage the weak. Campaigners for global justice must not be deflected, says Ann Pettifor.
Tuesday 18th April

Wonderful shrinking world

The pundits who embrace or reject globalisation too often live in an eternal present and ignore the lessons of the phenomenon’s deep past, says Alex MacGillivray.
Tuesday 14th March

Free trade? When it suits us

The world's leading trade powers are seeking to carve out a new deal on globalisation. Tom Burgis suspects the rich world is hoping to have its cake and eat it.

The Brazilian hat-trick

Brazil's growing trade power requires tricky new skills of the country's leaders. After hearing foreign minister Celso Amorim speak in London, Alex MacGillivray examines the challenges facing Brazil's trade diplomacy. 
Thursday 22nd December

The trade gangs of Hong Kong

The ultra-competitive world of trade negotiations sees multiple alliances battling for preference and interest. Alex MacGillivray maps the maze, and reports on a new responsibility-based approach evolving behind the scenes in Hong Kong.
Monday 19th December

The WTO's raw deal

As another global trade summit ends in a raw deal for the poor, Tom Burgis reports from Hong Kong on the changing dynamics between protest and power.
Tuesday 13th December

Why the poorest countries need a WTO

The pessimism surrounding the World Trade Organisation meeting in Hong Kong contrasts with the feelgood outcome of the Montreal climate-change summit. But Ehsan Masood argues that even a flawed WTO compares favourably with other United Nations institutions in giving the poorest nations voice and influence.
Monday 12th December

The siege of Hong Kong

As thousands of ministers, trade mandarins and protesters gather for this week’s crunch World Trade Organisation ministerial, Tom Burgis reports from Hong Kong, where the stakes could not be higher.
Thursday 23rd June

Tamil Nadu after the tsunami: hopes and obstacles

Their world turned upside down in the great Indian Ocean tsunami of December 2004. Six months on, the fishing communities of southeast India struggle to rebuild their lives. Kirsty Hughes reports from a forgotten frontline of reconstruction.
Wednesday 25th May

Tony Blair and Africa - old images, new realities

A proclaimed "year of Africa" is deaf to the ways that the most global of 21st-century citizens – Africans living in the rich north – are reinventing their home countries' economies, says David Styan.
Sunday 25th July

Trade and justice: time to choose

Global security is about inequality, injustice and livelihood – and trade connects all these issues, says Britain’s international development secretary. The cycle of international trade talks, which reach a critical point at the end of July 2004, is a key element in the progress towards a fairer world.
Tuesday 6th July

Can trade work for the poor? The challenge for UNCTAD

Oxfam’s Amy Barry attended the eleventh United Nations Conference on Trade And Development (UNCTAD) in June 2004. Her daily dispatches to openDemocracy, now gathered here in compendium format, trace the personal experience of one participant in a summit whose global impacts on the lives of millions are unseen but real.
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