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During the Cold War, international trade closely paralleled the division of the world into two rival political-military blocs. NATO and GATT were two sides of one coin; the Warsaw Treaty Organization and the Council for Mutual Economic Assistance were two sides of another. In this book Joanne Gowa examines the logic behind this linkage between alliances and trade and asks whether it applies not only after but also before World War II.
World politics --- International trade. --- Free trade. --- East-West trade. --- Alliances. --- Alliances --- Treaties of alliance --- International relations --- Treaties --- East-West trade (1945- ) --- International trade --- Free trade and protection --- Trade, Free --- Trade liberalization --- External trade --- Foreign commerce --- Foreign trade --- Global commerce --- Global trade --- Trade, International --- World trade --- Commerce --- International economic relations --- Non-traded goods --- Law and legislation --- Asquith, Henry H. --- Austria-Hungary. --- Britain. --- Cambon, Paul. --- Cold War. --- Deardorff, Alan V. --- Eichengreen, Barry. --- Entente, Anglo-French. --- France. --- Fudenberg, D. --- Gasiorowski, Mark. --- Germany. --- Grey, Sir Edward. --- Haggard, Stephan. --- Iceland. --- Italy. --- Japan. --- Keohane, Robert O. --- Kindleberger, Charles P. --- Lavergne, Real P. --- Linnemann, Hans. --- McKeown, Timothy. --- Milward, Alan S. --- Nye, John Vincent. --- Pollins, Brian. --- Snidal, Duncan. --- United Nations. --- Vietnam War. --- balance of power. --- bipolarity. --- chain-store paradox. --- deterrence. --- hegemonic stability theory. --- market failure. --- optimal tariff. --- rational hegemons. --- security externalities. --- terms of trade. --- Foreign trade policy --- Freihandel. --- Aussenhandel.
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