Rufus Yerxa
RUFUS YERXA
Rufus Yerxa 125
Rufus Yerxa, Deputy Director-General, WTO
Rufus H. Yerxa, Deputy Director-General, World Trade Organisation at Warwick Economics Summit
Public Talk “WHEN KAZAKHSTAN ACCEDES TO THE WTO: WHAT WOULD IT GAIN? WHAT WOULD ITS ROLE BE?”
30 years of settling disputes in the multilateral trading system
Hague Conference 120th Anniversary Programme - Part 2
Warwick Economics Summit 2012 Trailer
Sustaining the dynamics in emerging markets
Albert Berger & Ron Yerxa at 'Ruby Sparks' Premier!
Mari Elka Pangestu, Minister of Tourism & Creative Economy Republic of Indonesia
dec2 3 30 class
Ronnie C.Chan: China Is Complex But Very Promising
Rufus Yerxa
RUFUS YERXA
Rufus Yerxa 125
Rufus Yerxa, Deputy Director-General, WTO
Rufus H. Yerxa, Deputy Director-General, World Trade Organisation at Warwick Economics Summit
Public Talk “WHEN KAZAKHSTAN ACCEDES TO THE WTO: WHAT WOULD IT GAIN? WHAT WOULD ITS ROLE BE?”
30 years of settling disputes in the multilateral trading system
Hague Conference 120th Anniversary Programme - Part 2
Warwick Economics Summit 2012 Trailer
Sustaining the dynamics in emerging markets
Albert Berger & Ron Yerxa at 'Ruby Sparks' Premier!
Mari Elka Pangestu, Minister of Tourism & Creative Economy Republic of Indonesia
dec2 3 30 class
Ronnie C.Chan: China Is Complex But Very Promising
SALIM DERVISOGLU
Richard A Boucher, Deputy Secretary-General, OECD
DEPUTY DIRECTOR Speech
RAMADORAI FINAL
U.S. & China file WTO trade allegations
Republican Sexcapades With Cliff Schecter
Jean-Robert Saget, Ambassador of Haiti to Germany
Julio Lacarte Muró - The multilateral trading system's six decades
Alfredo Palacio, Former President of Ecuador
Surin Pitsuwan Interview - Warwick Economics Summit 2013
Nobel Laureate Professor George A. Akerlof at Warwick Economics Summit
Jure Jeric, MSc in Global Governance & Diplomacy (2013-14), University of Oxford
Luvuyo Ndimeni, Minister-Plenipotentiary, Deputy of South Africa to the U.N.
Clemens Boonekamp, Director, Agriculture and Commodities Division, (WTO)
Sanusi Lamido Sanusi, Governor of the Central Bank of Nigeria at Warwick Economics Summit
Jeric - "Clutch" HD produced by General Beats
Talk - Trade and Agriculture: How Farmers Get the Chaff
Clemens Boonekamp, Director, Agriculture & Commodities Division, WTO
Limburg@Work 12W04: Peter Van den Bossche (WTO) over mondiale economie
Gérard Biraud, Former Chairman, Joint Inspection Unit, United Nations
Eric Maskin Launch Event for State of the Markets Conference at Oxford
Viewpoint - Supachai Panichapakdi 1/3.mp4
Rufus H. Yerxa (born 1951) is currently Deputy Director-General of the World Trade Organization (WTO). He has served in this position since 2002. He was the former Chief International Counsel for Monsanto Company.
As an American public servant (under both Republican and Democratic administrations), he was US Ambassador to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) in Geneva; he played a key role in the Uruguay Round Negotiations. Yerxa served as a Deputy U.S. Trade Representative and U.S. Envoy to the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade, in Geneva. Prior to 1989, he served as the Assistant Chief Counsel of the House Ways and Means Committee and Staff Director of its Subcommittee on Trade.
From 1977 to 1981, he was the Legal Advisor to the Chairman of the International Trade Commission. An attorney and a member of the Washington State and District of Columbia Bars, Yerxa is a graduate of the University of Washington and the University of Puget Sound, and holds an LL.B. in international law from Cambridge University (UK). Prior to being named as Monsanto's international counsel, Yerxa was Monsanto's European general counsel.
Clifford D. "Cliff" Schecter (born 1971) is an American political writer, commentator, and operative. Schecter is considered to be a political progressive and wrote a book highly critical of 2008 Republican Presidential nominee John S. McCain; he has a reputation as a pugnacious proponent of progressive politics and policies. Schecter is married and lives with his wife and family in Columbus, Ohio.
Schecter was born and raised in New York City. He attended the University of Pennsylvania, where he became politically active as a progressive and worked on his first political campaigns. He graduated in 1994 with distinction with a Bachelor of Arts in American History.
Schecter then worked in the financial industry before returning to the political world as a polling analyst at the political consulting firm Penn, Schoen & Berland. He spent the 1996 campaign cycle assigned to their biggest client, Democratic President Bill Clinton.
Schecter left Penn & Schoen after Clinton's re-election, obtaining a master's degree in 1999 from Columbia University's School of International Affairs with a concentration in international journalism and public relations. In 2004, Schecter was admitted as a Graduate Fellow to the Ph.D. program in American History at American University.
Luis Alfredo Palacio González (born January 22, 1939) served as President of Ecuador from April 2005 to January 2007. From January 15, 2003 to April 20, 2005, he served as vice president, after which he was appointed to the presidency when the Ecuadorian Congress removed President Lucio Gutiérrez from power following a week of growing unrest with his government.
Born in Guayaquil, Palacio is a physician by profession, specializing in cardiology. He studied in his home town and, later, at Cleveland, Ohio, doing residency at Case Western Reserve University, followed by a two-year cardiology fellowship at Barnes-Jewish Hospital and Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, Missouri, in the United States. He later lectured in cardiology and public health at Guayaquil University's faculty of medicine.
Palacio was chosen as Lucio Gutiérrez's running mate in the 2002 election. It was a common sight during the campaign to see Gutiérrez, dressed in his army fatigues, accompanied by Palacio, wearing surgical scrubs. Palacio had previously served as the minister for health during the administration of Sixto Durán Ballén. Many of the ministers he chose were from the Democratic Left (Ecuador).