Can and Should Trade Be Used to Promote Human Rights, Fairness? Part 1

Dec 7, 2006

Edward Lincoln traces and assesses trends that have made economics more important since the 1960s and the forces in business, technology, and government that have driven those trends. He also offers suggestions on how economics can advance foreign policy goals.

Edward Lincoln traces and assesses trends that have made economics more important since the 1960s and the forces in business, technology, and government that have driven those trends. He also offers suggestions on how economics can advance foreign policy goals.

This talk is part of the 2006 Oxford-Uehiro-Carnegie Council Conference:
Free Trade, Fair Trade, and Sustainable Trade: The Case of Resource Extraction.

You may also like

MAY 18, 2026 Article

A Conversation with Carnegie Ethics Fellow Alex Urwin

This conversation features Alex Urwin, head of strategic partnerships & projects at the UK prime minister's office.

MAY 14, 2026 Podcast

Practicing Strategic Empathy and Navigating Competing Values

University of Hong Kong's Professor Brian Wong discusses U.S.-China relations and how to practice strategic empathy without succumbing to moral relativism.

MAY 6, 2026 Podcast

Building Moral and Professional Resilience

Watch/listen to the latest "Values & Interests" podcast featuring Gilles Michaud, UN Under-Secretary-General for Safety and Security.

No traducido

Este contenido aún no ha sido traducido a su idioma. Puede solicitar una traducción haciendo clic en el botón de abajo.

Solicitar traducción