"Shadow Negotiators is the most skillful demonstration to date of how international regime complexes emerge and shape global policy-making. A must read for anyone interested in the WTO and international regime complexity."—Karen J. Alter, Norman Dwight Harris Professor of International Relations, Northwestern University "Shadow Negotiators is both truly innovative and empirically sound – a combination that is rare. A must for those who are interested in international organizations and global governance."—Michael Zürn, Dean, Hertie School; Director of the Research Unit Global Governance, Berlin Social Science Center "Shadow Negotiators brilliantly shows how UN actors in food and agriculture have intervened to defend food security goals. Drawing on extensive research, Margulis makes a powerful case that international organizations employ a range of strategies to influence outcomes in international trade negotiations."—Jennifer Clapp, Professor, School of Environment, Resources and Sustainability, University of Waterloo "Margulis traces four cases, each illustrating a different method of intervention, and contributes to understandings of the growing complexity of international governance and the tensions betweencompetingeconomic values: economic liberalization and human security. Most specifically, the work contributes to a growing scholarship on regime complexes as analytic constructs in international relations, and advances an understanding of the independent interests of international organizations capable of autonomous action. Recommended."—S. P. Duffy, CHOICE "The versatility of Margulis' Shadow Negotiators is its principal strength, and this book will undoubtedly contribute to informing various substantive and methodological inquiries across disciplines on the WTO, food security and far beyond."—Anne Saab, European Journal of International Law "an excellent book that gives the reader insight into the complex and political world of trade negotiations and the role international organizations play in shaping or (sometimes) unwinding trade policy."—Joseph W. Glauber, World Trade Review "For the non-specialist, Shadow Negotiators is a both a discovery and a guide book.... The reader discovers the complexity of the institutions that are at play in food security internationally, with the various components of what [Margulis] refers to as a regime complex where the domains of agriculture and food, international finance, international trade, humanitarian assistance, human rights, the environment, and development overlap."—Serge Savary, Food Security "In Shadow Negotiators, Matias Margulis provides an empirically rich and persuasive account of how United Nations institutions have successfully shaped the rules of the World Trade Organization."—Erin R Graham, International Affairs "The book's contributions are threefold; to global trade politics, the UN's role in global economic governance, and, more broadly, theories about international organization and regime complexes. Indeed, Margulis effectively argues these findings are not limited to either agriculture or the system of international organizations exemplified by the UN."—Michael M. Gunter Jr., Journal of Human Rights "Margulis's research is carefully crafted.... Beyond careful case selection, the research is strengthened by its reliance on nearly 90 semistructured elite interviews with key participants, as well as a range of primary documents."—Surupa Gupta, Perspectives on Politics