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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation in India

Showing 191-200 of 204 results

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  • Document

    India's transition to global donor: limitations and prospects (ARI)

    Social Science Research Network, 2010
    India has increasingly sought to expand its activities as a donor, both to reposition itself as an emerging power and to use aid as an instrument for engaging with other developing countries. India started its aid programme soon after independence, with the budget speech of 1958 referring to INR100 million in multi-year grants to Nepal and an INR200 million loan to Myanmar.
  • Document

    The needy donor: an empirical analysis of India’s aid motives

    Social Science Research Network, 2012
    Although many people in India suffer from poverty, the country is also emerging as an important aid donor. This article analyses India’s aid allocation decisions with the intention of understanding why poor countries provide foreign aid.
  • Document

    China & India as Africa's new donors: the impact of aid on development

    Routledge Taylor and Francis Group, 2008
    This article attempts to assess the likely impact of Chinese and Indian aid on the development of Africa. The framework treats aid as one of four main channels through which China and India influence the shape and performance of particular sectors and, through them, development outcomes.
  • Document

    South-South cooperation in health and pharmaceuticals: emerging trends in India-Brazil collaborations

    Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2011
    Health 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.
  • Document

    Resurgent continent?: Africa and the world: emerging powers and Africa

    London School of Economics, 2010
    Over 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.
  • Document

    Self-interest and global responsibility: aid policies of South Korea and India in the making

    Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway, 2009
    This study investigates the aid policies of India and South Korea. Both countries represent a rather diverse group of countries that has been lumped together as ‘emerging’ donors. The role of ‘emerging’ donors is currently at the heart of the international aid discourse, but so far, knowledge about emerging donors is inadequate.
  • Document

    Changing the Aid for Trade debate towards content

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2009
    The Aid for Trade (AfT) debate has mostly focused on how to implement AfT programmes rather than on what to do and the specific content of these programmes. This policy brief finds that other relevant areas need to be integrated into the AfT agenda.
  • Document

    South-South and triangular cooperation in Asia-Pacific: towards a new paradigm in development cooperation

    Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2008
    The notion of South-South Cooperation (SSC) – capacity building, trade and investment between developing countries for self-reliance and growth – first became popular in the 1960s as former colonies began to address the challenges of underdevelopment.
  • Document

    South-South cooperation: for shared prosperity and inclusive globalisation

    INSouth, 2008
    This paper details excerpts from the inaugural address by Indian external affairs Minister, Shri Pranab Mukherjee at the academic forum of India, Brazil, and South Africa (IBSA) Partnership for Shared Prosperity and Inclusive Globalisation.
  • Document

    India’s engagement with the African Indian Ocean rim states

    Chatham House [Royal Institute of International Affairs], UK, 2008
    Despite viewing the Indian Ocean Rim (IOR) as its backyard, India has historically shown limited engagement in the region as it:

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