Our systems are now restored following recent technical disruption, and we’re working hard to catch up on publishing. We apologise for the inconvenience caused. Find out more

Recommended product

Popular links

Popular links


A World without Walls

A World without Walls

A World without Walls

Freedom, Development, Free Trade and Global Governance
October 2007
Available
Paperback
9780521534222
$34.99
USD
Paperback
USD
Hardback

    Mike Moore's reflection on his time as Director-General of the World Trade Organization is an important addition to the great globalization debate. Moore explains how a boy who left school at fifteen to work in a slaughterhouse came to head an organization charged with bringing rules and order to the world's trading system. He explains the thinking behind his reforms which helped the WTO move on from the debacle of Seattle to the successful Doha meeting and offers a robust and passionate defense of the principles of free trade.
    Mike Moore, a former Prime Minister of New Zealand, has enjoyed a long and distinguished career in politics. As Minister of Overseas Trade and Marketing, he led trade missions to Australia, Japan, China, India, Pakistan and Turkey. Subsequently he has served as Minister of Foreign Affairs and, until August, 2002, as Director General of the World Trade Organization. Moore has long been an active participant in international discussions on trade liberalization and has received numerous awards, including the New Zealand 1990 Commemoration Medal and New Zealand's highest honor, the Order of New Zealand. He lives in Geneva.

    • An insider account by one of the world's most influential leaders
    • A wide-ranging synthesis on the key issues of globalization, with provocative proposals on how the multilateral system should respond to the new pressures from civil society
    • Essential reading for everyone interested in the globalization debate

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Worth reading...compelling..." Weekly Standard

    "Mike Moore makes a strong case for the benefits of free trade and open markets. But he warns that global governance needs to be rethought to cope with the challenges of globalization. A wide ranging and thought-provoking book." George Soros, author of George Soros on Globalization

    "What shines through all this is Moore's unshakable faith in globalization and his contagious confidence in the combined ability of markets and democracies to make the world a better place for the vast majority of its inhabitants." Foreign Affairs

    "I now understand better why I like Mike Moore so much. Mike, a man essentially educated by the brute force of real-life challenges, has produced in this book an honest account of his very fine tenure as WTO Director-General. Those curious about either the evolution of the multilateral trading system, or interesting leaders, will find this book very enjoyable." Ernesto Zedillo, Former President of Mexico

    "...it seems like a good start on the path toward a world where goods, services, and people move freely." Weekly Standard

    "Reading Moore's book is not unlike spending half an hour with the man himself. It amounts to a thorough battering by fact, anecdote, protest, and personal conviction.... However, the real message is topical: the value and fragility of multilateralism.... Yet no reader could conclude anything other than that the WTO must succeed. For the weak and the powerful alike, the multilateral system it represents is too precious and too fragile to neglect or abuse." Financial Times

    "He's both self-congratulatory and self-deprecating, successfully weaving in humor to spice up what might otherwise be tedious accounts of office politics.... At a time when global institutions such as these seem both vitally important and uniquely threatened, Mr. Moore advocates greater education about their decisions and their interaction with civil society. A World Without Walls, especially when it's focused on the specifics of how the W.T.O. should operate--and how it actually does operate--is an admirable beginning." New York Observer

    "Mike Moore is that rare politician: a doer who is also a thinker. He pulled off Doha, putting the bumbling failure of Seattle behind us. In this fascinating book, he demonstrates that he can also speak to intellectuals, placing trade liberalization, indeed globalization, into an ambitious but realistic framework that can serve as an effective antidote to the anti-globalizers. And he does it elegantly and articulately. New Zealand has two great voices: Kiri Te Kanawa and Mike Moore." Jagdish Bhagwati, author of Free Trade Today

    See more reviews

    Product details

    October 2007
    Paperback
    9780521534222
    308 pages
    228 × 152 × 17 mm
    0.466kg
    15 b/w illus. 6 tables
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • List of figures
    • List of tables
    • Acknowledgements
    • 1. Introduction: the making of an internationalist
    • Part I. The Bigger Picture:
    • 2. What does globalisation mean?
    • 3. Food for thought
    • 4. The philosophy, politics and economics of trade and freedom
    • 5. Life is getting better
    • Part II. From Seattle to Doha:
    • 6. Setback in Seattle
    • 7. Why the WTO matters
    • 8. Forging a consensus
    • 9. Denouement at Doha
    • 10. Creating a 'World' Trade Organization
    • 11. How the 'new issues' could strengthen the agenda
    • 12. Why concluding the new round is crucial
    • Part III. Citizens, Corporates and a New Deal for Global Governance:
    • 13. Engaging civil society
    • 14. Corporate social responsibility
    • 15. Time to rethink global governance
    • 16. Future challenges
    • Notes
    • Index.
      Author
    • Mike Moore

      Mike Moore, the Director-General of the World Trade Organization from 1999–2002, is a former New Zealand Prime Minister, Trade Minister, Foreign Minister and Deputy Finance Minister. He is also the author of A Brief History of the Future, Children of the Poor, Fighting for New Zealand and the Added Value Economy, amongst other books.