Kimberly Ann Elliott
ExpertiseTrade policy (trade/trade agreements, agriculture), Globalization, and Governance and Democracy (corruption). Research TopicsGlobalization, Governance/Democracy, Regions, Trade PolicyEducationMA, Johns Hopkins University; BA, Austin College BackgroundKimberly Ann Elliott is a Senior Fellow with the Peterson Institute and the Center for Global Development. She is the author or co-author of numerous books and articles on a variety of trade policy and globalization issues, including uses of economic leverage in international negotiations (both economic sanctions for foreign policy goals and trade threats and sanctions in commercial disputes). Her most recent book is Delivering on Doha: Farm Trade and the Poor, which was co-published by CGD and IIE in July 2006. Other IIE publications include Can International Labor Standards Improve under Globalization? (with Richard B. Freeman, 2003), Corruption and the Global Economy (1997), Reciprocity and Retaliation in US Trade Policy (with Thomas O. Bayard, 1994), Measuring the Costs of Protection in the United States (with Gary Hufbauer, 1994), and Economic Sanctions Reconsidered (with Gary Hufbauer and Jeffrey Schott, 3rd. ed., 2007). In 2002-03, she served on the National Academies Committee on Monitoring International Labor Standards. Elliott received a Master of Arts degree, with distinction, in security studies and international economics from the Johns Hopkins University, School of Advanced International Studies (1984) and a Bachelor of Arts degree, with honors in political science, from Austin College (1982). In 2004, Austin College named her a Distinguished Alumna. To visit her IIE page, click here Institute for International Economics BooksEconomic Sanctions Reconsidered 3rd Edition (Forthcoming) Can Labor Standards Improve Under Globalization? June 2003 Corruption and the Global Economy June 1997 Reciprocity and Retaliation in US Trade Policy September 1994 Measuring the Costs of Protection in the United States January 1994 Economic Sanctions Reconsidered 2nd Edition December 1990 Institute for International Economics Policy Briefs03-3: Economic Leverage and the North Korean Nuclear Crisis (PDF) 01-5: Fin(d)ing Our Way on Trade and Labor Standards? 00-6: The ILO and Enforcement of Core Labor Standards (PDF) Institute for International Economics Working Papers03-7: Labor Standards and the Free Trade Area of the Americas (PDF) 02-5: Assessing Globalization's Critics: "Talkers are No Good Doers???" (PDF) Institute for International Economics Speeches, Testimony, Papers(Mis)Managing Diversity: Worker Rights and US Trade Policy (PDF) Preferences for Workers? Worker Rights and the US Generalized System of Preferences Evidence on the Costs and Benefits of Economic Sanctions Backing Illegal Sanctions |

