
Description
Background
In 1983, Consumer Unity & Trust Society (CUTS) was established as a consumer protection organisation (www.cuts-international.org) in traditional sense. Over the last three decades, CUTS has experienced organic growth and its agenda is not just limited to ëConsumer Protectioní but enhancement of ëConsumer Welfare.í With its headquarters in Jaipur, India and five overseas centres: Geneva (Switzerland), Hanoi (Vietnam), Nairobi (Kenya), Lusaka (Zambia) and Accra (Ghana), the organisation has evolved as a unique policy action- and think-tank working on cognate areas of Good Governance, Effective Regulation and Rules-based Trade.
CUTS involvement with trade and development issues began in early 1990s, when the negotiations under the Uruguay Round of the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) were at its peak. In 1995, CUTS initiated the formation of a network of like-minded organisations from South Asian countries ñ South Asia Watch on Trade, Economics & Environment (SAWTEE) ñ in order to build capacity of civil society organisations in South Asia to better understand trade and development linkages. In 1996, CUTS joined a group of international organisations to help establish the International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development (ICTSD) in Geneva, Switzerland.
In 1996, CUTS Centre for International Trade, Economics & Environment (CUTS CITEE) was established as a programme centre of CUTS International to focus its activities on understanding the issues and implications of an emerging international trade regime under the aegis of the World Trade Organisation and bilateral/regional free trade agreements.
The first few years of the Centre were dedicated to understand the implications of developmental aspects of multilateral trade negotiations, following which the Centreís work was diversified into issues relating to regional economic cooperation and on larger issues of linkages between trade, development and poverty including issues of development cooperation:
In short, over a decade and half, the Centre has consolidated its work on cognate issues of trade and development under three programme areas:
Vision:
Consumer sovereignty in the framework of social justice and economic equality, within vand across borders
Mission:
Pursuing economic equity and social justice within and across borders by persuading governments and empowering people
Goals
Major Achievements
Organization Types
Region
SDG

Secondary SDG
Partner organization
Website
Unit
Industries
Stay updated with the latest trends in South-South cooperation and access our vast repository of knowledge.
Copyright © UNOSSC/UNDP