Political Science
Political Science Department
Room 1149,
Chrysler Hall North
Windsor, Ontario N9B 3P4
(519) 253 - 3000 ext 2348 or
ext. 2347
|  | Lanoszka, Anna
Assistant Professor
B.A. Hons.(Carleton), M.A. Ph.D.(Dalhousie)
Contact Info:
Office: 1160 CHN
Phone: 253-3000 ext: 2355
Email: alanos@uwindsor.ca
Professor Lanoszka teaches in the areas of International Relations and International Political Economy. Her main research interests include international trade and finance, socio-economic problems of developing countries, foreign direct investment, intellectual property rights, and public policy. She is also interested in a wide rage of issues concerning globalization and autonomy especially when it comes to the impact that international institutions like World Trade Organization (WTO), World Bank (WB), and International Monetary Found (IMF) have on domestic governance. This is Prof. Lanoszka’s current research project founded by a SSHRC grant. Previously, she has spent almost two years working for the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland. She has also given numerous lectures on the subject of the WTO Agreements in Central Asia (Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan), Poland, Kenya, at the UNITAR in New York, and at the International Law Institute in Washington DC where she is a Visiting Faculty member.
Recent refereed publications:
“Global Politics of Intellectual Property Rights and the Pharmaceutical Drug Policies in Developing Countries” in International Political Science Review (IPSR), Vol. 24, No.2, 2003.
“The WTO Accession Process – Negotiating Participation in a Globalizing Economy” in Journal of World Trade, Vol. 35, No. 4, 2001.
“Institutional Development of the WTO” (with G. R. Winham) in The World Trade Organization in the New Global Economy, A. Rugman & G. Boyd (eds.) Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar, 2001.
“Principles and Priorities for Rule-Based Trade Facilitation in Central and Eastern Europe” in Legal Foundations for Trade and Commerce in Central and Eastern Europe, Chris Swift (editor), CSIS, Washington, DC, April 2000.
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Other recent publications:
“Implications for Canada of the Doha Development Agenda - An Analytical Study” (with G.R. Winham). A research paper commissioned by the Relations with the Developing Countries Division in the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Ottawa, March 2002.
Research interests: international trade and finance, socio-economic problems of developing countries, foreign direct investment, intellectual property rights, and public policy.
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