“This book could not be more timely. Anti-trade/anti-globalization sentiment and populist politics in key countries have discouraged leaders from pursuing liberal trade policies and completing the WTO’s Doha Development Agenda. The papers in this collection provide the types of analyses needed to inform policy debate, to remind us of the positive contribution of trade openness to global food security, and to offer alternatives to trade measures for dealing with food price fluctuations.”
–Kym Anderson, University of Adelaide and Australian National University