Search

Reset

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

Showing 191-200 of 581 results

Pages

  • Document

    Zimbabwe-Brazil cooperation through the More Food Africa programme

    Future Agricultures Consortium, 2015
    The expanding footprint of BRICS countries in Africa, especially over the last 15 years, has remained a subject of intense public interest in academic, development and diplomatic circles. There is some understandable trepidation among traditional donors towards the BRICS approach, and their focus remains on China.
  • Organisation

    SAIS China Africa Research Initiative

    The China Africa Research Initiative (CARI) is based at the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.
  • Document

    Beyond the North-South divide: triangular cooperation in the new development cooperation

    BRICS Policy Center / Centro de Estudos e Pesquisas BRICS, 2015
    International development cooperation has been changing rapidly during the last two decades. Shifts in international power constellations and a trend towards an increasing multipolarity are reflected in development cooperation institutions and settings.
  • Document

    South Africa’s foreign policy: tempering dominance through integration

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2015
    Southern Africa has always featured prominently in South Africa’s foreign policy. During apartheid, the National Party government saw fit to unleash a destructive agenda on neighbouring countries as an integral part of its strategy to quash support for the liberation movement.
  • Document

    Understanding the Rising Powers' contribution to the Sustainable Development Goals

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015
    Rising powers such as Brazil, India and China have been criticised for being obstructive in the negotiations on the post-2015 development agenda. The start of the United Nations (UN) negotiations saw high expectations for the role of these countries in shaping the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This leadership has not materialised.
  • Document

    Should Southeast Asia fear the Chinese juggernaut? The view from the Philippines

    Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2006
    China's emergence as an economic giant in the past 25 years has dramatically changed the global economic landscape especially in East Asia. Should this be a cause of fear for these Asian economies? Or a source of opportunities?
  • Document

    India-Myanmar Relations (1998-2008): a decade of redefining bilateral ties

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2009
    An examination of India's policy towards Southeast Asian countries shows that Myanmar figures prominently from all perspectives political, security, economic and strategic.
  • Document

    Modi in Mauritius: renewing a special relationship

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's forthcoming visit in 2015 to Mauritius and other countries in the Indian Ocean Region holds not only strategic significance but symbolic importance as well. The visit will allow Prime Minister Modi to establish a working and personal relationship with the newly elected government in Mauritius.
  • Document

    India and Japan: changing dimensions of partnership in the post-Cold War period

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2010
    The evolution of Japan's post-war relations with most Asian countries was largely governed by two factors the legacies of the Second World War and the compulsions of the Cold War. While the Southeast Asian region posed formidable diplomatic challenges to Japan, South Asia provided a soothing contrast.
  • Document

    Concepts in and perspectives on global health diplomacy

    EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2013
    Health has been brought into foreign policy processes for several centuries, as a goal of foreign policy; a tool of foreign policy, to secure economic or security interests of states and an intended outcome in the collective negotiation of competing interests.

Pages