1. Debi Barker and Jerry Mander, Invisible Government, a report of the International Forum of Globalization, San Francisco, Calif., October 1999, p. 16.
2. John J. Audley, Green Politics and Global Trade: NAFTA and the Future of Environmental Politics (Washington, DC: Georgetown University Press, 1997).
3. The compromise agreement regulated production adjusted for trade, and imposed penalties for trade with non-parties to the regime. For a discussion of the role of trade provisions in negotiating the Montreal Protocol, see Richard Eliot Benedick, Ozone Diplomacy·. New Directions in Safeguarding the Planet (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1998), ch. 7.
4. CITES maintains three lists: species threatened with extinction, species threatened with extinction if trade is not controlled, and species facing overexploitation in a particular country. On the rules and workings of CITES see Edith Brown Weiss, "The five international treaties: a living history', in Edith Brown Weiss and Harold Jacobson (eds) Engaging Countries: Strengthening Compliance with International Environmental Accords (Cambridge, Mass.: The MIT Press, 1998).
5. On Basel and the World Trade Organization, see Jonathan Krueger, International Trade and the Basel Convention (London: Earthscan Publications, 1999). See also the website of the Basel Action Network .