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E-raamat: Regional Governance in Post-NAFTA North America: Building without Architecture

Edited by (University of Alberta, Canada), Edited by (Dalhousie University, Canada)
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Twenty years after NAFTA, the consensus seems to be that the regional project in North America is dead. The trade agreement was never followed up by new institutions that might cement a more ambitious regional community. The Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP), launched with some fanfare in 2005, was quietly discontinued in 2009. And new cooperative ventures like the US-Canada Beyond the Border talks and the US-Mexico Merida Initiative suggest that the three governments have reverted to the familiar, pre-NAFTA pattern of informal, incremental bilateralism. One could argue, however, that NAFTA itself has been buried, and yet the region somehow lives on, albeit in a form very different from regional integration in other parts of the world.

A diverse group of contributors, from the United States, Canada, and Mexico, with experience in academia, government service, think tanks and the private sector bring to bear a sophisticated and much needed examination of regional governance in North America, its historical origins, its connection to the regional distribution of power and the respective governments’ domestic institutions, and the variance of its forms and function across different issue areas. The editors begin by surveying the literature on North American regional politics, matching up developments there with parallel debates and controversies in the broader literatures on comparative regional integration and international policy coordination more generally. Six contributors later explore the mechanisms of policy coordination in specific issue-areas, each with an emphasis on a particular set of actors, and with its own way of characterizing the relevant political and diplomatic dynamics. Chapters on the political context for regional policy coordination follow leading to concluding remarks on the future of North America.

At a time when scholarly interest in North America seems to be waning, even while important and interesting political and economic developments are taking place, this volume will reinvigorate the study of North America as a region, to better understand its past, present and future.

List of Figures and Tables
vii
Acknowledgments ix
1 Building without Architecture: Regional Governance in Post-NAFTA North America
1(30)
Brian Bow
Greg Anderson
2 "Bundled Transgovernmentalism" and Environmental Governance in North America
31(18)
Debora Vannijnatten
Neil Craik
3 New Directions in North American Border Security Governance
49(25)
Jason Ackleson
Yosef Lapid
4 Faraway So Close: Territorial Security and Regionalism in North America and Europe
74(16)
Ruben Zaiotti
5 The Government-Designed Architecture of North America's Disaggregated Trade and Investment Arbitration Regimes
90(20)
Stephen Clarkson
6 Lacking Linkages: Labor, Civil Society, and Subfederal Trade Policy in North America
110(20)
Christopher J. Kukucha
7 Security, Technology, and Market Restructuring in North America's Energy Industries and the Demise of Mexico's State-Oil-Monopoly Regime
130(30)
Isidro Morales
8 "Exceptional," Immovable, Adaptable: Congress and the Limitations of North American Governance
160(18)
Geoffrey Hale
9 Polls, Parties, Politicization, and the Evolution of North American Regional Governance
178(29)
Brian Bow
Arturo Santa Cruz
10 How Do We Get to North America?
207(23)
Stephen Blank
11 Conclusion: Without Architecture, but Not without Structure
230(23)
Greg Anderson
Brian Bow
Contributors 253(4)
Index 257
Brian Bow is Associate Professor of Political Science at Dalhousie University. He is the author of The Politics of Linkage: Power, Interdependence and Ideas in Canada-US Relations (2009), which was awarded the Donner Prize as the best public policy book published in Canada that year. He has also published a number of articles and chapters on US-Canada relations, Canadian foreign policy, and regional integration, and has co-edited volumes on North American security cooperation and Canadian foreign policy.









Greg Anderson is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Alberta. He is the author of numerous articles on North American integration, international political economy, and US foreign economic policy. He was co-editor, with Christopher Sands, of Forgotten Partnership Redux: Canada-US Relations in the 21st Century (2012).