Addressing Climate Change: A WTP Exception to Incorporate Climate Clubs. p. 1-7.
International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development & World Economic Forum, (2015).
Fixed Book Prices and their Impact on Mexicans? Reading Habits.
Tesis de Maestría. Rotterdam: Erasmus University, 2014
Legal privilege in Mexico: reflection on its foundations and scope for economic competition purposes (in Spanish)
Legal privilege, generally recognized in common law, grants special protection to communications between lawyers and their clients with the aim of promoting the administration of justice by facilitating legal representation.
Mega-regionals? How? Mega? Will Their Impact Be for Latin America?
Mega- regional Trade Agreements: Game-Changers or Costly Distractions for the World Trading System? . Editado por Beatriz Leycegui y otros miembros del Global Age
Economic Statecraft through the Use of Two-Level Games. Foreign Policy Breakthroughs: Cases in Successful Diplomacy. Editado por R. Hutchings y J. Suri, p. 201-225. Oxford: University Press,
Economic Statecraft through the Use of Two – Level Games
Bali package: scope and impact on future negotiations (in Spanish)
PUENTES- Vol. 14, Num. 9. ICTSD, p. 8. Ginebra,
Towards Global Governance of FDI? Issues on Getting to a Multilateral Approach
Foreign Direct Investment
as a Key Driver for Trade,
Growth and Prosperity:
The Case for a Multilateral
Agreement on Investmen
New competition regulatory agencies incorporated.
Recent amendments to Articles 6, 7, 27, 28, 73, 78, 94 and 105 of the Mexican Constitution in relation to competition and telecommunications matters were published in the Federal Official Gazette on June 11 2013 (for further details please see “Congress enacts constitutional amendments affecting competition”).
Congress enacts constitutional amendments affecting competition.
In March 2013 President Enrique Peña Nieto and the coordinating deputies of several parliamentary groups(1) submitted to Congress an initiative to amend the telecommunications and competition regulatory framework in Mexico. The proposal introduces substantial changes to the institutional structure of the Federal Competition Commission, among other regulatory changes (for further details please see “Proposed constitutional amendments overhaul Federal Competition Commission”).
Reflections on Mexico’s international trade policy 2006-2012 (in Spanish)
Book by Beatriz Leycegui Gardoqui