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Model or Mayhem?: US-Jordan FTA and the Afterlife of Labor Provisions
Abstract
Entering into force in late 2001, the Free Trade Agreement between the US and the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan was lauded as a major step forward in the protection of labor rights. For the rest of the decade, the US-Jordan FTA was the ideal to which other bilateral trade deals were compared. While the limitations of labor provisions is well-explored in the academic literature, using US archives and interviews in Amman, Jordan, I argue that while the labor provisions did not succeed in their stated goals, they have had a perverse and complex ‘afterlife’ shaping labor in Jordan in unexpected ways, coloring the US-Jordan relationship, and influencing FTAs the US over the past nearly 25 years.
Discipline
Political Science
Geographic Area
Jordan
Sub Area
None