Conclusion, Andrea Harrington

  1. Speech given by Daniel Seligman on The Multilateral Agreement on Investment, University of Washington, February 18, 1998.
  2. The Hill (Washington D.C.) 3, June 1997, page 3.
  3. Seligman, op. cit.
  4. ibid.
  5. ibid.
  6. The Hill, op. cit.
  7. Hansen-Kuhn, Karen, "Clinton, NAFTA and the Politics of U.S. Trade," NACLA Report on the Americas, Sept/Oct 1997, page 25.
  8. United States-Latin American Relations: Shunted to the Slow Track" http://www.currenthistory.com/shifter.html
  9. "Extra Update!" Biweekly Newsletter of FAIR, February, 1998.
  10. Hansen-Kuhn, op. cit., page 26.
  11. Los Angeles Times, 27 January, 1998, page A14.
  12. "Extra Update!", op. cit.
  13. ibid.
  14. Sanchez, Roberto, Mexico and the North America Free Trade Agreemen, Who Will Benefit?, London, 1996, page 95.
  15. Gabriel, Christine and Laura MacDonald, "NAFTA Women and Organising in Canada and Mexico: Forging a 'Feminist Internationality'," Journal of International Studies, 1994, page 538.
  16. United States-Latin American Relations: Shunted to the Slow Track", op. cit.
  17. Herzenberg, Stephen, "Calling Maggie's Bluff: The NAFTA Labor Agreement and the Development of an Alternative to Neoliberalism," Canadian-American Public Policy, December 1996, page 9.
  18. Associated Press (Washington), 27 October, 1997.
  19. "From NAFTA Debate to Democratic and Sustainable Integration: Potential Implications of the North Americam development Bank" http://naid.sppar.ucla.edu/comp/nadbank.html