
Daniel Madar
is a professor of Political Science at Brock
University, Ontario, Canada
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Heavy Traffic
Deregulation, Trade, and Transformation in North American Trucking
Daniel Madar
Donner Prize, Honourable Mention, 2001
Canada and the United States exchange the
world's highest level of bilateral trade.
Trucking, their key transport sector, carries
two-thirds of the goods. In Heavy
Traffic, Daniel Madar examines the way in
which the regulatory reform of American and
Canadian trucking, coupled with free trade and
integrated industrial logistics, have radically
changed the industry.
Before deregulation, restrictive entry rules had
fostered two separate national highway transport
markets, and most international traffic changed
carriers at the border. Madar shows that
deregulation created a de facto regime of free
trade in trucking services, enabling Canadian
and American carriers to follow the expansion of
transborder traffic that began with the Canada–
U.S. Free Trade Agreement and continues with
NAFTA. As commerce diffuses across the
continent, trucking's adaptiveness and
flexibility make it the pivotal medium.
As a study in policy formation and in the
international consequences of domestic reform,
Heavy Traffic will be of interest to students
and scholars of political economy, international
relations, and transportation.
Canadian Studies
World rights
250 pp., 6.00" x 9.00", 2001
Paperback, $24.95,
0-87013-556-2 978-0-87013-556-9
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