Cameron Books
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Captivatingly romantic and exciting!Review Date: 1999-04-05

A Must Read for Trade Policy PeopleReview Date: 2007-12-19

GSPReview Date: 2003-09-10
By Juan Carlos Sanchez Arnau
"The generalized system of preferences and the developing country's trade" is a result of a detail research on one of the few instruments (the GSP) adopted by the industrialized countries to promote exports from the developing word/
The author was closely associated with the negotiations for the adoptions of the GSP as a representative of his country to UNCTAD and GATT and followed this implementation for many years in this organizations. He took advantage of his experience to choice this subject for a Ph.D. thesis which recently received a mention "magna cum laude" in the University of Fribourg, Switzerland.
This book is an analysis on how the GSP was implemented and applied throughout thirty years and the impact that it has on the exports and industrialization process of the beneficiary developing countries. It also looks as any possible future role that the GSP may have as an international trade policy tool and instrument of cooperation for development.
Many studies and forecasts have been made since the pre-GSP days on the benefits that this system would bring to the developing countries. The international economy was then in an expansion phase and most of the forecasts of the GSP future were made by making projections from recent trend/ Party as a result of the prevailing economic optimism, and because of the high level of customs tariffs existing at that time in most of the industrialized countries, it was considered that such a preferential tariff treatment could make significant contributions towards helping the developing countries to find a solution to their endemic problems related to a lack of industrialization and vulnerability in the foreign sector.
The economy and the international trade have gone throw mayor changes since then, and the role of GSP as a factor for simulating the economies of the developing countries has been considerably reduced. The industrialized nations -and a few developing countries- have put into effect the tariff reductions agreed at the successive negotiating rounds of GATT: the "Kennedy" and "Tokyo" rounds, and more recently the "Uruguay Round", thus diminishing the margins of preference granted through the GSP. In turn, the preferential schemes have also been modified, in certain cases reducing their original scope and in others by increasing product coverage and the list of beneficiary countries alike.
On the other hand, a certain number of developing countries have significantly increased their share in international trade of manufactured products and even the structure itself of trade has undergone major modifications.
The GSP was one of the few trade policy instruments of the industrialized countries that was conceived to promote a growth in export earnings for the developing countries. It has been in operation for years and still we have not had global balanced overview of its impact on exports and the industrialization process in those countries. That is the objective of this book. To achieve this was necessary to examine the way that trade policy has changed in the industrialized countries, at least as far the interests of the developed countries are concerned . But the trade policy followed by some developed countries is also annualized to better understand the results of the GSP and identify the possibilities that still exists for making better use of the GSP within the current international economic and political context
With the aim of meeting these objectives, this book has been divided into three parts. The first of this begins with and analysis of the preferential trade theory, including the presentation and discussion of a model representing this type of trade and the role of the effective protection theory en order to understand its effects. We then look at the structure of protection in the industrialized countries, in the light of the objectives of the GSP and the above-mentioned theoretical model, thus bringing the initial theoretical analysis in line with the reality of the problems associated with international trade. Part Two, firstly, gives and overall picture of the changes in the world economy and the trade policy of the industrialized countries since the GSP was put into effect. It then looks at the changes brought about in the structure of international trade during that same period. Part three is devoted to a detailed analysis of the preferential schemes of the different industrialized countries and looks at the reasons that help to explain why preferential treatment has had such as limited impact on the beneficiary countries' exports. Finally, we try to identify the ways in which the GSP can still continue to be a factor in stimulating these exports in the future, despite the current trend of significant reductions in customs tariffs for industrial products.
This third section is based on a wide-ranging statistical analysis, which has resulted in the preparation of a set of tables providing details about the benefits that have, in fact, been offered through the GSP to the developing countries, by each of the preference-giving countries. In order to make it easier to read the main body of the text and to be able to refer readily to these tables, they have been put together in an appendix shown at the end of the book. A bibliographical appendix is also included.
Rafael Patrigiani
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A study in tyranny - "A GENERATION OF THE DARK HEART"Review Date: 2000-11-24

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Wonderful WhimsyReview Date: 2002-12-22

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Fantastic but..........................Review Date: 2005-10-25

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insightfulReview Date: 2000-12-16

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What a kick!Review Date: 2002-10-22

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The Great Dolphin Door: The Adventures of Frostfin and SliverbeakReview Date: 2006-06-22
A fun side note: The book is illustrated by Vinya Cameron, who is the best friend of the author's Mother! I read an article about Matthew and his book in a local newspaper while vacationing on Anna Maria Island, Florida and immediately ordered 4 copies from Amazon!

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Mythography RevisitedReview Date: 2005-03-01
Mythology was no longer imbibed in the nursery; nor could it be simply picked up from the often oblique allusions in the classics. It had to be learned in school, as illustrated by the extraordinary amount of elementary mythological information in the many surviv¬ing ancient commentaries on the classics, notably Servius, who offers a mythical story for almost every person, place, and even plant Vergil mentions. Commentators used the classics as pegs on which to hang stories they thought their students should know.
A surprisingly large number of mytho¬graphic treatises survive from the early empire, and many papyrus fragments from lost works prove that they were in common use. In addition, author Alan Cameron identi¬fies a hitherto unrecognized type of aid to the reading of Greek and Latin classical and clas¬sicizing texts what might be called mytho¬graphic companions to learned poets such as Aratus, Callimachus, Vergil, and Ovid, com¬plete with source references. Much of this book is devoted to an analysis of the importance evidently attached to citing classical sources for mythical stories, the clearest proof that they were now a part of learned culture. So central were these source references that the more unscrupulous faked them, some-times on the grand scale.
Excerpt: Despite an extraordinary surge of interest in Greek mythology over the last few decades, there has been no corresponding interest in our sources of information about the myths. Books on mythology have been appearing at an alarming rate in most modern languages, but not a single comprehensive study of the mythographers. Of course, we know many famous episodes in the great mythical sagas direct from the classics (Homer, Hesiod, Pindar, the Attic tragedians), not to mention monuments of archaic and classical art. But any alert reader who has tried to follow up earlier or later stages of even the most familiar stories in a care-fully documented handbook like Timothy Gantz's indispensable Early Greek Myth (1993) must be aware that countless details we take for granted are first men¬tioned not by Homer or Aeschylus or even Callimachus but by some anonymous Roman or even Byzantine hack. Where did they get their information, and how reliable is it?
Those who teach Greek mythology in American colleges usually assign their students the Bibliotheca ascribed to Apollodorus, a convenient survey of most of the main stories. It is indeed a handy, well-arranged, comprehensive manual, with many virtues. But what are its credentials? A precise date is out of reach, but it is not likely to be earlier than the first century of our era and might be as late as the third. In the Bibliotheca's defense, critics often confidently assert that it is "drawn from excellent sources," a claim based on its frequent direct citation of specific texts from archaic and classical poets and mythographers, citations we can in one or two cases actually verify ourselves. That is to say, the writer gives the appearance of an easy, firsthand familiarity with the entire range of relevant texts. But this is an illusion. In all probability he came by most of his citations at second (or third) hand and had never even seen an original copy of many of the texts he quotes (Ch. V. 3). The same will usually apply to the scholiasts, however much we might like to think that some particular scholion bristling with plausible details and archaic citations was copied directly from one of the great Hellenistic critics working in the library at Alexandria surrounded by books.
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