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Agricultural policy reform in the BRIC countries
National Council of Applied Economic Research, India, 2011This working paper forms part of a project titled ‘Facilitating Efficient Agricultural Markets in India: An Assessment of Competition and Regulatory Reform’. The paper contains a preliminary review of agricultural policy developments in the economies of Brazil, Russia, India and China (BRIC countries) for the purpose of informing India’s agricultural policy reform agenda.OrganisationWatershed
Watershed is a Brazilian website, which provides free access content related to Brazil, China and India in the areas of international relations, economics and culture.DocumentCharting new directions: Brazil's role in a multi-polar world
Policy Network, 2011Brazil has successfully and peacefully managed the transition to a democratic polity, a stable economy and an increasingly middle class society. These transitions have been based on gradual and hybrid economic, and social and international policies, which defy easy categorisation.DocumentA comparative perspective on poverty reduction in Brazil, China and India
World Bank, 2009Brazil, China and India have witnessed falling poverty during their reform periods, but to varying degrees and for different reasons. This paper compares the experiences of these three countries and elaborates on what they could learn from each other.DocumentBRICs’ philosophies for development financing and their implications for LICs
International Monetary Fund, 2012Flows of development financing from the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India and China) to low income countries (LICs) have surged in recent years. Unlike aid from traditional donors, BRICs (excluding Russia) view their financing as primarily based on the principles of South-South cooperation, focusing on mutual benefits without attachment of policy conditionality.DocumentThe global South and the international politics of climate change. Proceedings report of the international workshop: negotiating Africa and the global South’s interests on climate change
Institute for Global Dialogue, South Africa, 2011This proceedings report captures the first half of the discussion at COP17 hosted in Durban, South Africa, in 2011 where the role of rising powers within the international climate change negotiations was discussed. Panellists in this report have been drawn from Brazil, India, China and South Africa (BASIC countries) to share their expertise on these multidimensional country positions.DocumentRising powers, reforming challenges: negotiating agriculture in the WTO Doha Round from a Brazilian perspective
2011This article examines the history of the WTO Doha Round agriculture negotiations from 2001 to 2011 in light of the shifting global balance of economic power. It shows that the rise of China, Brazil and India, among other developing countries, had an impact on the negotiations and affected the negotiating structure, processes and decision-making.DocumentShifting paradigm: how the BRICS are reshaping global health and development
Global Health Strategies, 2012BRICS' (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) foreign assistance spending has been growing rapidly and these countries have been exploring opportunities for more formal collaboration among themselves and with developing countries. International organisations have also started looking to the BRICS as potential donors and health innovators.DocumentSouth-South cooperation in health and pharmaceuticals: emerging trends in India-Brazil collaborations
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2011Health is emerging as an important area for collaboration among emerging economies. The health sector is an area in which India and Brazil have increasingly collaborated, bilaterally and in several international forums. The author of this paper argues that such collaboration has added new thrust to the process of South-South cooperation.DocumentResurgent continent?: Africa and the world: emerging powers and Africa
London School of Economics, 2010Over the last fifteen years, emerging powers have made significant inroads into Western political and economic dominance in Africa. The result is a diversification of external actors involved across a range of sectors of the African economy.Pages
