The editors have assembled an international team of expert scholars together to describe and analyze the role of organized business in creating, and responding to, the regionalization and internationalization of markets and politics. Chapters focus on theoretical issues, discrete regions drawn from the major trading regimes around the globe, and sectors, and together address a number of important issues: First, to what extent does organised business push the deepening and widening of regional and global trading regimes? Second, does the development of these multi-level governance regimes in turn pull organised business into more comprehensive levels of organisation and public policy coordination? The collection concludes that globalization and the 'new regionalism' cannot be understood without recognising the key role of business organizations. This book is unique because no other volume details the critical relationship between organized business and globalization/new regionalism.Foreword: P.Schmitter List of Tables List of Figures Acknowledgements List of Acronyms Notes on the Contributors Introduction; H.Jacek From Ships Passing in the Night to a Dialogue of the Deaf: the Contribution of International Relations Theory to Understanding Organized Business; G.R.D.Underhill The Role of Organized Business in the Formulation and Implementation of Regional Trade Agreements in North America; H.Jacek Business Associations, Regional Integration and Systemic Shocks: The Case of the ABM in Mexico; D.R.Wood Organized Business and the European Union; J.Greenwood Asia-Pacific Business Activity and Regional Institution-building; N.Gallant & R.Stubbs Responses of Brazilian and Argentinean Business to the New Regional Integration Experience in Latin America: The Building of the Southern Common Market (Mercosur); M.D.de Landa & M.C.Sajem Business Interest Groups and the State in USSR and Russia: Change of the Models; S.Peregudov Antipodean Exceptionalism?: Australian Farmerl£M