Trade and Sustainable Development: The Role of Impact Assessments

Posted: 15 Apr 2025

See all articles by Elisabeth Bürgi Bonanomi

Elisabeth Bürgi Bonanomi

University of Bern - Centre for Development and Environment (CDE)

Date Written: January 01, 2015

Abstract

In the Bretton Woods era, trade liberalization, the improvement of labour rights and working conditions, and the strengthening of environmental policies, were seen as mutually supportive. But is this always true? Can we continue to pretend to protect the rights of workers and to improve environmental protection, particularly through climate change mitigation strategies, within an agenda focused on trade liberalization? Is it credible to pursue trade policies that aim to expand the volumes of trade, without linking such policies to labour and environmental standards, seen as 'non-trade' concerns? This book asks these questions, offering a detailed analysis of whether linkage is desirable and legally acceptable under the disciplines of the World Trade Organization (WTO). It concludes that trade can work for sustainable development, but only if we see it as a means for social and environmental progress, including climate change mitigation, and if we avoid fetichizing it as an end to be pursued for its own sake.

Keywords: Impact Assessments, Trade and Sustainable Development, Trade, Sustainable Development, SDGs

Suggested Citation

Bürgi Bonanomi, Elisabeth, Trade and Sustainable Development: The Role of Impact Assessments (January 01, 2015). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=5216568

Elisabeth Bürgi Bonanomi (Contact Author)

University of Bern - Centre for Development and Environment (CDE) ( email )

Mittelstrasse 43
Bern, Bern
Switzerland

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