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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation in Brazil
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Brazil’s generous diplomacy: friendly dragon or paper tiger?
Graduate Institute of International Studies, Geneva, 2012Featuring a stable democracy and dizzying economic growth, Brazil is fast on the way to acquiring global power status. The country is investing in enhanced multilateral and bilateral relationships as a means of leveraging trade and reducing vulnerability abroad and on the domestic front.DocumentWhat next for the BRICS Bank?
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2013A new development bank to be created by the ‘Rising Powers’ of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) is intended to promote greater cooperation between developing countries, and address what is seen by many as a history of misguidance and underinvestment by the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF).DocumentFDI from BRICs to LICs: Emerging Growth Driver?
International Monetary Fund, 2011Despite the rapid increase in FDI flows to LICs, there have been relatively few studies that have specifically examined these flows. The paper looks at BRIC FDI to LICs with a special focus on Chinese FDI to sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries, and aims to broadly assess its macroeconomic impact using case studies.DocumentRising Powers in International Development: an annotated bibliography
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2013The Rising Powers – a category that includes the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) as well as other key countries such as Mexico, Turkey and Indonesia – are establishing themselves as an influential presence in the global development landscape, and playing an increasingly important role in shaping prospects for poverty reduction in lowincome countries.DocumentChina’s Lusophone Connection
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2008In October 2003, Macau hosted the first ministerial meeting of the Forum for Trade and Economic Cooperation between China and Portuguese-speaking countries, bringing together high-level representatives from Angola, Brazil, Cape Verde, East Timor, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Portugal, Macau and China.DocumentBuilding blocks for equitable growth: lessons from the BRICS
Overseas Development Institute, 2013The BRICS countries have been lauded for their economic growth and resilience through the 2008/09 financial crisis; they are becoming models of development for development practitioners, researchers and other emerging economies.DocumentAnother BRIC in the wall? South Africa's developmental impact and contradictory rise in Africa and beyond
2012Globalisation is transforming the nature of authority in international relations, as hegemony is replaced by geo-governance, involving a more varied set of actors. However, private authority over markets and resources is still often constituted and refracted through states.DocumentEnhancing South-South and triangular cooperation: study of the current situation and existing good practices in policy, institutions, and operation of South-South and triangular cooperation
United Nations Development Programme, 2009South-South and triangular cooperation has become a major subject of international development discussions. One of the key issues identified in such discussions is the lack of information on South-South and triangular cooperation implemented by different parties and the need to promote knowledge-sharing on the practices of South-South and triangular cooperation, especially existing good practice.DocumentBrazilian technical cooperation for development: drivers, mechanics and future prospects
Overseas Development Institute, 2010This study focuses on Brazilian technical cooperation with developing countries and analyses its policy framework, institutional set-up and implementation modalities, and discusses options for the future.DocumentBrazil’s conception of South-South 'structural cooperation in health’
Global Forum for Health Research, 2009South-South cooperation (or technical cooperation among developing countries), a foreign policy and international development promotion tool introduced in the late 1970s by the non-aligned countries, has steadily gained importance.Pages
