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Introduction. II. Contemporary Trade Liberalization and the Trade in Human Beings. A. Overview of Modern Trafficking in Humans The U.N. Trafficking Protocol defines trafficking in human beings as: 1. Conceptual and Legal Frameworks. a. Law Enforcement. b. Human Rights. c. Labor Rights. d. Women's and Children's Rights. 2. Critiques of the Frameworks: Too Little, Too Narrow, and Not Enough!. B. Trade Liberalization Disequilibrium: "Liberalizing" Trade and Disrupting the Transnational Labor Market. 1. Incomplete Liberalization. 2. Restrictions on Human Mobility: Historical Anomaly. 3. Resulting Disjuncture. III. The Status Quo: Existing Reform Proposals. A. The Transnational Market for Labor. 1. States Trade in Human Labor. a. The United States. b. Canada. c. The Philippines. d. Pakist...
... of all will be faced by citizens and policy-makers in migrant sending and receiving countries....agricultural fields, ended in the 1960s. 146 The H-1 and H-2 p...
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... of students of economic history, policymakers, and the public to those of the earlier period. Ho... perspective--supplies an overarching framework that helps make sense of the economic events of th..., with predictable consequences for agricultural lenders. (13) . Bernanke ([1983] 2000) updates and...
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... new direction is to be known as the Agricultural Policy Framework. The objective is to take a proac...
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..."The policy of preserving the full disclosurenecessary in..., utilize, andmanage Indian agricultural lands consistent with its fiduciary obligation and... That statutory framework establishes a "conventional fiduciary relationship...
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...The California court found "no basis in policy or reason to impose a duty on a veterinarian to av... treated animals as part of agricultural production to save animals' lives so they could co... a grievance will depend on the type of framework created in the state's enabling legislation. In th...
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When Evo Morales, former coca grower and leader of the coca-growers' union, was elected president of Bolivia in 2005, many observers of Bolivian politics anticipated that Bolivia would rapidly cease cooperation with the United States in the "War on Drugs." Such a change, however, has not been apparent. What explains Bolivia's continued cooperation? I argue here that US-Bolivian trade policy, which enables the US to use trade preferences as a carrot to promote Bolivian drug policy, may best explain this apparently anomalous behavior, suggesting that trade may be an effective tool in promoting non-economic foreign policy goals.
...Baldwin presents a useful framework for the analysis of the use of economic tools in f... beneficial for US firms (especially agricultural firms) these agreements may have painful distribut...
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... hope for Afghanistan's future? Will the policy of muddling through with a military strategy and "... institutional policy and regulatory framework to support the effective utilization of aid, the c... systems that are key to recovering agricultural production and food security. It has also failed t...
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... appropriate distance from the immediate policy-making process and exercising influence without an... the medium-term plan was to provide a framework within which the member stales could review the or... Technology Strategies for Improving Agricultural Productivity and Food Security in Africa," 2004; s...
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... Ocean Observations in a Dynamical Framework: A 2004-06 Ocean Atlas. Journal of Physical Oceano... size at which robust estimations of agricultural land use can be made, and implications for diffuse...Review of Environmental Economics and Policy 5: 66-88. . Aoyagi, T. and N. Seino. 2011. A Squar...
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... responsive to interests of those whose framework for self-advancement is set by the basic structure... friendship is not properly expressed in a policy of leaving a friend in the lurch whenever enticed ... have sometimes raided better-off agricultural communities to relieve dire poverty in times of fa...