Global Environment and Trade Study


The Global Environment & Trade Study was a non-profit research institute established in 1994 to study the complex linkages between international trade and environmental sustainability. GETS supported numerous research projects on the legal, economic, and ecological aspects of trade and environment.
GETS was centered at Yale University.
GETS also studied the expanding role of civil society in global governance.
In 2004, the GETS Board decided that a sufficient amount had been accomplished over the decade, and that it was time to terminate the project.

Major Accomplishments

GETS had four major accomplishments:
The founders of GETS were: James Cameron, Steve Charnovitz, Daniel Esty, and Mark Ritchie.
In 2000, Monica Araya joined the GETS Board and focused on environment, trade and investment issues in developing countries.
Some staff associated with GETS included Orin Kirshner, who served as Executive Director from 2001–2003, Beatrice Chaytor, Hari Osofsky, and John Wickham.

Institutional Participation and Collaboration

GETS had three major participating institutions—the Foundation for International Environmental Law and Development, the Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy,
and the Yale Center for Environmental Law & Policy
In addition, GETS collaborated with numerous research institutes in developed and developing countries.

Conferences

GETS held policy conferences or workshops in Cancun, Geneva, London, Miami, New York, Seattle, Tokyo, and Washington.
GETS also held a major Conference in Singapore in June 1996 co-sponsored with the National University of Singapore. At the end of that Conference, the co-chairs issued a statement with several recommendations, many of which were adopted by the WTO, other international organizations, and governments in subsequent years.

Funding

The major funders of GETS included: the Ford Foundation, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, the Netherlands Ministry of Housing, Spatial Planning and the Environment, the German-Marshall Fund, the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Center for Global Partnership/Japan Foundation, the Pew Charitable Trusts, and the Rockefeller Brothers Fund.

Commentary

A retrospective on competitiveness and the Council's work was recently written by Martin Neil Baily and Robert Z. Lawrence.

Publications

Principals and researchers supported by GETS produced dozens of books and articles on trade and the environment, and related topics during its ten years of operation. Among them were:
"Achieving Harmony in Trade and Environment," http://www.gets.org/pages/harmony/.