Feb 05 Mon
2018

Paradigm Lost: US Trade Policy as an Instrument of Foreign Policy

05:30PM - 07:00PM Washington College of Law NT01
Ambassador Wolff serves as Deputy Director-General of the 164 member World Trade Organization (WTO).  For the six years prior to his appointment in 2017, he served as the Chairman of the National Foreign Trade Council (NFTC), one of the principal U.S. organizations supporting international trade.  Ambassador Wolff served as United States Deputy Special Representative for Trade Negotiations in the Carter Administration and was General Counsel of the Office in the Ford Administration. He was acting Head of the U.S. Delegation for the Tokyo Round of multilateral trade negotiations, and a principal draftsman of the basic U.S. law creating a mandate for international trade negotiations. As Deputy USTR he was a founder of the OECD Steel Committee and its first chairman. He has served as a senior trade negotiator in, and advisor to, both Republican and Democratic U.S. administrations.  After government service, he was a leading international trade lawyer dealing with international negotiations and litigation. Prior to his service at USTR, he served in the U.S. Treasury as staff attorney for the National Advisory Committee on International Monetary and Financial Policy, participating in the work of the OECD Development Assistance Committee, reviewing lending policies in the IMF and the World Bank, and participating in the drafting of the Articles of Agreement of the African Development Fund. He was director of the Treasury’s Office of Multilateral Trade Negotiations.  He is a member of the Advisory Committee of the Peterson Institute for International Economics (PIIE), is a lifetime National Associate of the National Academies, having served several terms on the Science, Technology and Economic Policy Board of the Academies and chairing its Committee on Comparative Innovation Policies. He is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations and the E15 Initiative’s Experts Group (Innovation).   He has lectured and written extensively on trade topics including the need for a strong, open rules-based multilateral trading system. He holds a J.D. degree from Columbia University and an A.B. degree from Harvard College.

Organizer

International Legal Studies Program

Special Events & CLE

202-274-4075
secle@wcl.american.edu

Where

Washington College of Law
4300 Nebraska Avenue, NW
Washington DC
20016