Mission statementAccording to Global Trade Watch's website: "GTW was created in 1995 to promote government and corporate accountability in the globalization and trade arena. Having built unique substantive capacity and diverse contacts with other public interest organizations, the press and policy-makers, GTW is one of the few progressive U.S. organizations focused full-time on globalization issues. We have become a leader in promoting a public interest perspective on an array of globalization issues, including implications for our food, health and safety, environmental protection, economic justice, and democratic, accountable governance." GTW's beliefs, aims and issuesThe Global Trade Watch's motto is "Promoting democracy by challenging corporate globalization." GTW is also known for promoting a public interest perspective which takes into account a variety of globalization issues, such as food, health and safety, environmental protection, economic justice, and democratic accountable governments. Through their work the GTW is attempting to establish the fact that the current globalization model is neither a random inevitably nor free trade. The GTW feels each "Public Citizen", once empowered with information and tools to effect change should make activism a part of her or his daily life. GTW feels the current system of corporate managed trade is merely one version of rules, which are not acceptable and must be changed. One of the major issues for the GTW this year is to draw links between the CAFTA/FTAA and the WTO, which are based on the same ideologies and provisions. AffiliationsGTW hold a position on the executive board on the Citizens Trade Campaign, a coalition of organizations seeking socially and environmentally just trade policy. The GTW also belongs to Our World Is Not For Sale (OWINFS), a network committed to a sustainable, socially just, democratic and accountable multilateral trading system. Through its affiliations GTW works to develop public policy debates on vital trade and globalizaton issues. PublicationsBooksWhose Trade Organization: A Comprehensive Guide to the WTO was written by Lori Wallach and Patrick Woodall. Wallach and Woodall's book analyzes WTO terms that have led to job losses in the major industrialized states, environmental damage, health risks and over international inequality. ReportsPublic Citizen's Pocket Trade Lawyer: The Alphabet Soup of Globalization - This guide is intended to help people go to the legal sources with an understanding of some of the most essential specialized terms, language and legal quirks of globalization’s instruments. Trade Wars - Revenge of the Myth: Deals for Trade Votes Gone Bad - Details all the promises made by various administrations in exchange for trade votes. NAFTA Chapter 11 Investor-State Cases: Lessons for the Central America Free Trade Agreement - The track record of cases demonstrate an array of attacks on public policies and normal governmental activity at all levels of government. This report is the most comprehensive analysis of NAFTA cases yet published in the United States. External linksReferences
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