Odell, John.
June 2009. Breaking Deadlocks in International Institutional
Negotiations: The WTO, Seattle and Doha. International Studies
Quarterly.
Abstract:
Negotiations among
members of international institutions often stalemate yet the
outcomes vary. Sometimes talks end in impasse
and other times in agreement. Several familiar theories are unable
to explain the contrast between two prominent outcomes in the
World Trade Organization—its 1999 deadlock in Seattle and
its 2001 agreement in Doha, Qatar on an agenda for a new round.
Extensive original evidence from these cases documents mechanisms
that can tip the negotiation process between impasse and agreement
in any institution, not only economic ones. The study illustrates
benefits for international relations research of building on
the relatively neglected tradition of negotiation analysis, a
substantial part of which is outside political science.