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Topic: NAFTA



  
 North American Free Trade Agreement - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
NAFTA parties, however, have the option of appealing the decisions to binational panels composed of five citizens from the two relevant NAFTA countries.
Transnational corporations have tended to support NAFTA in the belief that lower tariffs would increase their profits.
Another matter that is particularly controversial is "Chapter 11", which allows corporations to sue federal governments in the NAFTA region if they feel a regulation or government decision adversely affects their investment.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NAFTA   (1674 words)

  
 NAFTA & Environmental Laws: The Case of Canada and Ethyl Corp.
NAFTA requires member countries to compensate investors when their property is "expropriated" or when governments take measures "tantamount to expropriation." Ethyl claims that the MMT ban constitutes such an expropriation.
The likelihood that NAFTA, and other agreements like it, could restrict the ability of democratically elected governments to legislate on such matters as public health and safety and environmental protection was downplayed by many advocates of the agreement.
Under NAFTA’s investment chapter, for the first time in a multilateral trade or investment agreement, corporations are granted "private legal standing" or the ability to sue governments directly and to seek monetary damages.
http://www.globalpolicy.org/socecon/envronmt/ethyl.htm   (1613 words)

  
 Public Citizen Publications - NAFTA Chapter 11 Investor-to-State Cases: Bankrupting Democracy
The publicized goal of the FTAA proposal is to facilitate trade and deepen economic integration by expanding the NAFTA provisions that eliminate tariff and nontariff barriers to trade and investment throughout the hemisphere.
Another troubling trend in the NAFTA Chapter 11 cases is the tendency of corporations to seek government compensation in instances when its actual investment in the country being sued is not readily apparent.
In the first seven years of NAFTA, with only a small number of cases filed, an astonishing $13 billion has been claimed by corporations in their initial filings: $1.8 billion from U.S. taxpayers, $294 million from Mexican taxpayers and a whopping $11 billion from Canadian taxpayers.
http://www.citizen.org/publications/release.cfm?ID=7076   (4685 words)

  
 NAFTA 3.5 Years Afta
In fact, the main features of NAFTA establish a comprehensive set of rules that guarantees to multinational manufacturers that their plants in these countries will be protected and that they will have unlimited, free access to the U.S. retail markets for their products.
The most notable are the multinational corporations of all three NAFTA countries whose profits and stock values have soared while the cross border production has cut costs.
The Clinton Adminstration gave Americans their assurances that NAFTA would include multinational Secretariats which provided for the "upward harmonization" of Labor and Environmental standards of the member countries.
http://www.siliconv.com/trade/tradepapers/naftaafta.html   (2120 words)

  
 PPI: The NAFTA: Fulfilling Its Promise
Through the vehicle of trade liberalization and for sound commercial reasons, NAFTA has introduced to Mexico principles of transparency, the right to appeal government decisions, public access to information, and other processes that are the foundations of open, pluralistic and democratic societies.
NAFTA's impact on jobs in the U.S. economy has been negligible in most sectors with positive job growth in others.
In the same session of Congress that passed the NAFTA implementing legislation, Congress and the Administration were unable to agree on any major proposals to modernize our nation's job placement and worker training systems.
http://www.ppionline.org/ppi_ci.cfm?knlgAreaID=108&subsecID=127&contentID=1786   (3303 words)

  
 NAFTA
NAFTA includes two important side agreements on environmental and labor issues that extend into cooperative efforts to reconcile policies, and procedures for dispute resolution between the member states.
The NAFTA Secretariat administers the dispute settlement procedure.
NAFTA’s dispute resolution mechanism includes provisions for panels to settle disputes.
http://www.law.duke.edu/lib/researchguides/nafta.html   (1149 words)

  
 Public Citizen NAFTA - North America Free Trade Agreement - North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
NAFTA promoters - including many of the world’s largest corporations - promised it would create hundreds of thousands of new high-wage U.S. jobs, raise living standards in the U.S., Mexico and Canada, improve environmental conditions and transform Mexico from a poor developing country into a booming new market for U.S. exports.
NAFTA required limits on the safety and inspection of meat sold in our grocery stores; new patent rules that raised medicine prices; constraints on your local government’s ability to zone against sprawl or toxic industries; and elimination of preferences for spending your tax dollars on U.S.-made products or locally-grown food.
Plus, until NAFTA “trade” agreements only dealt with cutting tariffs and lifting quotas to set the terms of trade in goods between countries.
http://www.citizen.org/trade/nafta   (619 words)

  
 Notes of NAFTA: The Masters of Man
NAFTA "will have the effect of prohibiting democratically elected bodies at [all] levels of government from enacting measures deemed inconsistent with the provisions of the agreement," the L.A.C. report continues, including those on the environment, workers' rights, and health and safety, all open to challenge as "unfair restraint of trade."
The basic goals were lucidly described by the C.E.O. of United Technologies, Harry Gray, quoted in a valuable study of NAFTA by William McGaughey of the Minnesota Fair Trade Coalition: "a worldwide business environment that's unfettered by government interference" (for example, "package and labelling requirements" and "inspection procedures" to protect consumers).
NAFTA also includes intricate "rules of origin" requirements designed to keep foreign competitors out.
http://www.zmag.org/chomsky/articles/9303-nation-nafta.html   (1875 words)

  
 USATODAY.com - 10 years ago, NAFTA was born
NAFTA backers and bashers alike have made herculean efforts to quantify the impact of NAFTA on jobs, income, living standards, growth, labor rights and environmental quality.
The Bush administration says income gains and tax cuts that resulted from NAFTA "are worth $930 each year" for the average U.S. household of four.
Supporters see NAFTA as a much-maligned treaty that set Mexico firmly on a path toward democratic reform, open markets and a stable economy, while giving a modest boost to the U.S. and Canadian economies.
http://www.usatoday.com/money/economy/trade/2003-12-31-nafta_x.htm   (818 words)

  
 TAP: Vol 14, Iss. 7. How NAFTA Failed Mexico. Jeff Faux.
Indeed, NAFTA is the nation-building template imposed on developing countries by recent corporate-dominated U.S. administrations and their client international finance agencies.
Made whole with more than $60 billion of the taxpayers' money, these crony capitalists resold their banks at a handsome markup to foreign investors.
Rather, they predicted that any benefits would go largely to the rich while the middle class and the poor would pay the costs, and that the promised growth would not materialize.
http://www.prospect.org/print/V14/7/faux-j.html   (2315 words)

  
 USTR - North American Free Trade Agreement
The NAFTA is an example of the benefits that all countries could derive from moving forward with multilateral trade liberalization.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), is an outstanding demonstration of the rewards to outward-looking countries that implement policies of trade liberalization as a way to increase wealth and improve competitiveness.
According to figures of the International Monetary Fund, total trade among the three NAFTA countries has more than doubled, passing from US$306 billion in 1993 to almost US$621 billion in 2002.
http://www.ustr.gov/Trade_Agreements/Regional/NAFTA/Section_Index.html   (155 words)

  
 nafta
The proponents of NAFTA include most economists, multinational corporations in general, and several key political figures, like President Clinton.
While having an enforced labor right provision in place would likely have had little effect on thwarting the peso crisis, it would have served to protect the average worker from the oppression they have found because of it.
While some may charge that creation of policies to fulfill this objective are too difficult to do, the costs of not doing them are too high not to do.
http://my.execpc.com/~squall1/nafta/nafta.html   (3233 words)

  
 Global Exchange : Top Ten Reasons to Oppose the
Free Trade Area of the Americas
The NAFTA experience demonstrates how basic labor rights and the interests of working families are eroded by "free trade" agreements that lack enforceable labor protections.
Such suits, established by NAFTA's Chapter 11, allow corporations to sue governments for compensation if they feel that any government action, including the enforcement of public health and safety laws, cuts into their profits.
NAFTA includes unprecedented ways for corporations to attack our laws through so-called "investor-to-state" lawsuits.
http://www.globalexchange.org/ftaa/topten.html   (1205 words)

  
 The Clinton Vision: Update, by Noam Chomsky
On trade, beyond NAFTA, business is pleased with Clinton initiatives to strongarm competitors and "his plan to link about $150 million in foreign aid to purchases of US goods," another proper form of state intervention to protect business from market forces.
Leading gainers would be those sectors "based in and around finance," Lueck reported: "the region's banking, telecommunications and service firms" -- that is, insurance companies, investment houses, corporate law firms, the PR industry, and the like.
Mexican political scientist Jorge Casta$eda may exaggerate when he writes that "the whole purpose of NAFTA" was to strengthen the "authoritarian regime" of the always-ruling party, the PRI, but there is little doubt that a major purpose was to "lock in" the benefits that repression and violence offer for profit-making.
http://www.chomsky.info/articles/199401--.htm   (4745 words)

  
 TRADE: North American Deal Dismal After a Decade
If there is one major lesson of NAFTA that many analysts from all three countries agree on, says the Institute of Policy Studies, it is that ”there is no guaranteed link between trade and investment liberalisation and improvements for workers or the environment”.
NAFTA rules also limit each country's domestic policies to deal with issues ranging from environmental health and food safety to banking and truck safety regulation.
It says foreign direct investment by NAFTA partners in the three countries jumped from 136.9 billion dollars in 1993 to 299.2 billion dollars in 2000.
http://www.ipsnews.net/interna.asp?idnews=21711   (1360 words)

  
 NAFTA : Trade Agreements : Learn About Trade : Trade Matters : AFSC
As maquilas are struggling to compete with factories in Asia, their tough cost-reduction programs have resulted in consequences such as the dismantling of seniority-based benefits.
The trade surplus (exports exceed imports) with Mexico before NAFTA has turned into a massive trade deficit (imports exceed exports), which has eliminated hundreds of thousands of manufacturing jobs.
The status of trade agreements are constantly changing, please continue to look to our website for updated versions of these agreements and other resources.
http://www.afsc.org/trade-matters/trade-agreements/NAFTA.htm   (1052 words)

  
 ERS/USDA Briefing Room - North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
The 2005 workshop, held May 5-6, examined the contributions of NAFTA’s committees and working groups to integration, the recent experiences of the beef and pork sectors, and issues concerning developing and developed countries with respect to domestic support programs.
Additional data and information on NAFTA are available from USDA, other U.S. government sources, international organizations, the Canadian government, the Mexican government, universities, and other sources.
ERS is the principal USDA agency involved in the preparation of the Department's Congressionally mandated NAFTA Report.
http://www.ers.usda.gov/Briefing/NAFTA   (911 words)

  
 Marketplace's "After NAFTA" series
He says the consumer is the big winner from NAFTA because reducing tariffs and sourcing parts abroad has lowered prices and created more consumer choice.
In the first seven years of NAFTA, foreign corporations collected $1.8 billion from U.S. taxpayers, alone; Canadian taxpayers coughed up $11 billion.
The Chapter 11 provision has been a major point of contention for countries cutting trade deals with the U.S. The world has been watching as the benefits and pitfalls of NAFTA have been played out on the global stage.
http://marketplace.publicradio.org/features/nafta   (1040 words)

  
 OpinionJournal - Featured Article
Salinas left office, Nafta ensured that the trend toward liberalization would continue under a new administration.
Manufacturing networks incorporating the comparative advantages of all three Nafta members have made North America an attractive investment for global capital.
In less than a decade the openness of free trade helped promote monumental changes in Mexican politics, and in its economy and financial system.
http://www.opinionjournal.com/editorial/feature.html?id=110004539   (815 words)

  
 Broken Promises
But it's not surprising that national media who are so unwilling to honestly examine the effects of past trade pacts would be interested in squelching debate on future ones.
Establishment media also left unchallenged the administration's attribution of the disappointing trade balance results to internal Mexican economic problems that had nothing to do with the pact.
Economists routinely use trade balances to reckon job creation and loss; the "Failed Experiment" indicates that the quadrupling of the U.S. deficit with Mexico and Canada works out to some 420,000 jobs lost to increased imports and to companies shifting production to Mexico to take advantage of lower wages.
http://www.fair.org/index.php?page=1396   (2128 words)

  
 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
Congressional voting patterns on NAFTA: an empirical analysis.
The job-eating villain: is it NAFTA or Mexico's currency crisis?
The framework agreement proposed to eliminate restrictions on the flow of goods, services, and investment in North America.
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0104566.html   (536 words)

  
 Free Trade Agreements
Investor rights under NAFTA, however, have been protected by Investor-State Dispute Mechanisms that allow foreign companies to sue governments for loss of potential profits, should national environmental and labor laws or other regulations disrupt the activity of the foreign company.
While some sectors have gained, close to ten years of experience under the agreement show that NAFTA has failed to meet its promises of poverty reduction and development in Mexico.
They point to indicators such as the boom in foreign investment in Mexico, the increase in maquiladora employment in border cities, and the surge in exports to the United States.
http://www.wola.org/economic/nafta.htm   (602 words)

  
 TN work permits under NAFTA
NAFTA provides for temporary entry for many Canadian short-term business visitors who receive their compensation from a Canadian company.
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has greatly increased the ability of Canadian citizens to work in the U.S., and U.S. citizens to work in Canada.
We charge a flat fee for preparing all NAFTA applications, so there are no surprises.
http://www.allhod.com/nafta.shtml   (940 words)

  
 TN NAFTA Home Page: A U.S. Immigration Permit For Canadians
The immigration-related provisions of NAFTA are very similar to those expressed in the prior United States-Canada Free Trade Agreement (FTA), which went into force on January 1, 1989.
The new provisions of NAFTA pertain to Canadian and Mexican citizen temporary visitors, treaty traders, investors, temporary workers, and professionals.
All INS employees are subject to supervision and audit controls, however, so applicants should expect to be turned back if they cannot prove their cases.
http://www.grasmick.com/nafta.htm   (2812 words)

  
 USTR - NAFTA at 10: Myth - NAFTA Was a Failure for the United States
o Income gains and tax cuts from NAFTA were worth up to $930 each year for the average U.S. household of four.
· In ten years of NAFTA, total trade among the three countries has more than doubled, from $306 billion to $621 billion in 2003.
· U.S. exports to Canada and Mexico grew from $142 billion to $263 billion in NAFTA’s first ten years.
http://www.ustr.gov/Document_Library/Fact_Sheets/2003/NAFTA_at_10_Myth_-_NAFTA_Was_a_Failure_for_the_United_States.html?ht=   (379 words)

  
 NAFTA'S CORPORATE CON ARTISTS
Once NAFTA passed, the wage cuts and the tax breaks were not enough to keep those jobs in Fort Wayne.
Then in 1992, GE managed to squeeze a $485,290 tax cut out of the local government, claiming it was necessary to defray the cost of new machinery needed to preserve jobs.
Almost all of the job claims are empty statements by USA NAFTA firms that they intend to hire more workers, not that they have already created actual jobs.
http://mediafilter.org/MFF/CAQ/CAQ54nafta.html   (3159 words)

  
 VDARE.com: 01/14/03 - NAFTA Negatives: American Agribusiness Displacing Mexican Peasants
Calls for the government to do something have increased, and the government has indicated that NAFTA can be reconsidered.
Yes, I supported NAFTA when it was being passed.
How about putting NAFTA expansion on hold for now?
http://www.vdare.com/awall/nafta.htm   (718 words)

  
 NAFTA Information
The Commission was created by the NAFTA side accord provisions, and offers a broad spectrum of useful environmental information on the site.
Lists opportunities in the NAFTA marketplace, its services to business, a message board to list leads and inquiries, and lists links to other NAFTA-related sites on the Internet.
Provides information of the NAFTA countries, and current and key topics related to NAFTA.
http://www.mexico-trade.com/nafta.html   (233 words)

  
 NAFTA
Although NAFTA was promoted as a "free trade" agreement among the nations of Canada, Mexico, and the United States, it has much more to do with economic integration and eventual political merger than it does with free trade.
The construction of a world super-state is progressing one chunk at a time with NAFTA set to become the "European Union" of the Western Hemisphere.
The NAFTA agreement between the United States, Mexico, and Canada was signed by President George Bush (the senior) in 1992.
http://www.stoptheftaa.org/ftaa/nafta.html   (756 words)

  
 Technorati Tag: NAFTA
Call it NAFTA, free trade, what you will, it is nothing but a pure treasonous sell out of the interests of American citizens...
Become a member to save searches in a Watchlist.
Now you can see the Top 100 Blogs, as measured by your Favorites!
http://technorati.com/tag/NAFTA   (499 words)

  
 NAFTA FAQ
The product must meet the NAFTA Preference Criterion, or no NAFTA CofO should be issued.
It is only a matter of time before enforcement catches up with these companies and individuals.
Your freight forwarder or customs broker can assist you.
http://www.zodl.net/naftafaqs.htm   (431 words)

  
 NAFTA
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is an agreement between the United States, Canada and Mexico that’s goal is to eliminate all trade barriers between the nations within fifteen years of initial employment (January 1, 1994).
Five years previous to NAFTA, the United States and Canada established a free trade zone with each other.
One example of the effects of NAFTA on the US is in the agricultural sector of the economy.
http://www.rose-hulman.edu/Class/hu/Christ/va199/intltrade/schedule.htm   (224 words)

  
 Resist the FTAA
The FTAA would undermine democracy, take essential public services out of the hands of government and civil society and codify laws that allow corporate interests to supersede public interests.
The minister proposed that the hemispheric trade pact contain the same wording on health services as the 10-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
His 'draft text' left the health-care sector highly vulnerable to commercial pressures.
http://www.geocities.com/ericsquire/ftaa.htm   (5126 words)

  
 NAFTA Investor-State Arbitrations
For example, each NAFTA Party must accord investors from the other NAFTA Parties national (i.e.
Chapter Eleven of the North American Free Trade Agreement (the "NAFTA") contains provisions designed to protect cross-border investors and facilitate the settlement of investment disputes.
The following links provide general background on the NAFTA, the relevant arbitral rules and investment disputes:
http://www.state.gov/s/l/index.cfm?id=3439   (370 words)

  
 5018b
Contains complete text as well as side agreements on environment and labor, and U.S. reservations to the agreement.
NAFTA analysis (including the Sierra Club NAFTA analysis, Minnesota_Trade_News_analysis
NaftaLab A partial list of NAFTA sources on the Internet:
http://cetai.hec.ca/cours/stanley/5018b.htm   (339 words)

  
 The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
Under these provisions, all tariffs affecting agricultural trade between the United States and Canada, with a few exceptions for items covered by tariff-rate quotas, will be removed by January 1, 1998.
NAFTA Agriculture Fact Sheets: Commodities and Other Topics
The agricultural provisions of the U.S.-Canada Free Trade Agreement, in effect since 1989, were incorporated into the NAFTA.
http://www.fas.usda.gov/itp/policy/nafta/nafta.html   (339 words)

  
 ZNet Commentary: NAFTA and Remittances
Mexico’s economy isn’t in a total free-fall though, which is a testament to an ability to do what neoliberals love most: export… The only thing is that in Mexico’s case it is not the exportation of products or materials we’re talking about but rather people.
Assuming 700,000 workers work 50 hours a week for 52 weeks a year at $1.47 per hour the total amount brought into the Mexican economy is $2.68 billion.
The reasons for migration then probably lie in the effects NAFTA and its economic liberalization agenda have had on the country’s economic situation.
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2004-01/20engler.cfm   (1122 words)

  
 What Is Wrong with NAFTA: Archive Entry From Brad DeLong's Webjournal
I agree that Mexican government corruption (and other inefficiencies) probably contributes to high costs for farmers; you agree that bad infrastructure probably contributes, and that a wise use of tax dollars (like the US highways) can lower costs, which can be passed on to consumers.
The question is whether the Economist is taking the loony position I ascribed to it, that Mexico's high costs are solely due to insufficient competition.
Mexico had a breathing-space under NAFTA to reform its agricultural practices.
http://www.j-bradford-delong.net/movable_type/archives/001178.html   (3608 words)

  
 Peace, order and good government, eh?: We could have told them that
Now that seems a little more to the point, but it suggests that American legislators don't read the legislation they're voting on.
Similar tribunals existed in other trade agreements even before Nafta.
Under the Nafta agreement the government whose court system is challenged is responsible for awards by the tribunals.
http://www.pogge.ca/archives/000372.shtml   (841 words)

  
 NAFTA - Dossier documents on policy issues
..."Our free trade agreement [NAFTA], of course, is about more than just economic integration.
eliminates restrictions on foreign investment and ensures non-discriminatory treatment for local companies that are owned by investors in other NAFTA countries;
The NAFTA was negotiated in 1991 and 1992; side agreements on labor and environmental matters were completed in 1993; the agreements were approved by the respective legislatures in late 1993; and the agreements went into force on Jan. 1, 1994.
http://www.usembassy-mexico.gov/bbf/bfdossier_NAFTA.htm   (351 words)

  
 NAFTA Resources
Congressional legislative history with reports from the House and Ways Committee, The House Energy Committee, and the Senate Finance Committee.
A collection of www resources on the internet, and of other data generated by the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Market Access and Compliance, at the U.S. Department of Commerce.
A text database pertaining to the trilateral free trade agreement involving the United States, Mexico and Canada (NAFTA).
http://www-learning.berkeley.edu/Courses/AS102Sum97/Resources/nafta.html   (313 words)

  
 The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)
In addition, NAFTA has established a strong foundation for future growth and has set a valuable example of the benefits of trade liberalization.
The Agreement has brought economic growth and rising standards of living for people in all three countries.
Find the text of the Agreement, publications and general information.
http://www.dfait-maeci.gc.ca/nafta-alena/menu-en.asp   (102 words)

  
 [No title]
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is a trade agreement among the United States, Canada, and Mexico that liberalizes restrictions on trade among the three countries.
The Department of Commerce's Market Access and Compliance offices monitor this Agreement to ensure that Canada and Mexico fully comply with their obligations.
In order for a product to be eligible for lower tariff rates when entering Mexico or Canada, the product must be produced in the United States, entirely of NAFTA component parts, or if foreign components are used, the foreign component must undergo sufficient processing in the United States to meet NAFTA requirements.
http://www.export.gov/fta/Country/NAFTA/index.asp?dName=NAFTA   (291 words)

  
 nafta - Lex Mercatoria: International Economic Law
Nafta at Public Citizen / Global Trade Watch
http://www.jus.uio.no/lm/international.economic.law/nafta.html   (135 words)

  
 Amazon.com: NAFTA: What Comes Next? (The Washington Papers): Books: Sidney Weintraub
With the signing of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the U.S. proposal for the widening of NAFTA to include the whole of the Western Hemisphere, there is now a greater mutuality of interest between the U.S. and the rest of the hemisphere than at any time in the recent past.
Latin American and Caribbean countries--most now democracies--have altered their development philosophy, placing greater stress on the workings of the market and opening their own markets to import competition.
Mexico, Canada, and the United States continue to deepen and refine their understanding of the practical implications of NAFTA.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0275951189?v=glance   (697 words)

  
 [No title]
These include safety regulations, insurance requirements, tariff requirements, and payment of all taxes and fees.
For trucks and buses, NAFTA liberalizes access for motor carriers on both sides of the border on a phased schedule over six years from entry into force of the agreement and provides for liberalizing investment restrictions on trucking companies established in Mexico and the United States.
http://www.dot.gov/nafta   (748 words)

  
 National Aerobics & Fitness Trainers Association [NAFTA]
Since 1993 over 65 thousand satisfied Fitness Professionals have become NAFTA certified.
NAFTA is an education and training organization for fitness professionals.
NAFTA is dedicated to offering certification programs and continuing education that teach concepts and theories of health and fitness.
http://www.nafta1.com   (235 words)

  
 Export Assistance
2002:Obtaining copies of NAFTA Text/Tariff Elimination Schedule/Supplemental Agreements from U.S. Government Printing Office
2005: List of Department of Commerce NAFTA Industry Reports and Ordering Information
NAFTA TARIFF SCHEDULE FOR U.S. How to Determine Tariff Phaseouts for Canada under NAFTA and Specific Tariff Rates for Chapters 1-98
http://www.mac.doc.gov/nafta/menu1.htm   (1486 words)

  
 FedLaw - NAFTA
Trade Act Programs for Workers (Dept of Labor)
NAFTA Information (U.S. Customs and Border Protection, DHS)
Summary of North American Free Trade Agreement Act (NAFTA) (U.S. Customs and Border Protection, DHS)
http://www.thecre.com/fedlaw/legal27qnafta.htm   (78 words)

  
 NAFTA
How does your group's aspect of NAFTA affect the agreement as a whole?
What effect does your aspect of the agreement have on citizens of the US?
Your completed Extended Constructive Response(ECR) (ECR Scoring Tool)
http://www.bcpl.net/~sullivan/modules/nafta   (436 words)

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