Search
Searching with a thematic focus on South-South cooperation, Rising powers in international development
Showing 201-210 of 581 results
Pages
- Document
Literature review on co-operation in essential medicines production and procurement between Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA) and Brazil, India and China
EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2013Access to essential medicines is one of the key requirements for achieving equitable health systems and better public health in east and southern Africa (ESA). One constraint to this is that the region’s medicine production capacity remains weak.DocumentSecuring Afghanistan: historic sources of India's contemporary challenge
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2013Withdrawal of the Western security umbrella has problematised India's current development aid-led soft power approach in Afghanistan. This paper looks at the tensions that shape India's strategic thought in the region. The northwest frontier has traditionally defined India's territorial defence. In looking at historical debates regardingDocumentIndia-Japan economic partnership agreement: gains and future prospects
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2014Economic relations between India and Japan have improved in recent years. The signing in February 2011 of the India-Japan Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement (CEPA) Ehas further enhanced bilateral trade and investment relations between the two Asian giants.DocumentOvercoming barriers to medicines production through south-south cooperation in Africa
EQUINET: Network for Equity in Health in Southern Africa, 2013Access to essential medicines is one of the key requirements for achieving equitable health systems and better population health. The number of people with regular access to essential medicines increased from 2.1 billion to about 4 billion between 1997 and 2002. However, access to medicines in sub-Saharan Africa remains low.DocumentSouth Africa, the Indian Ocean and the IBSA-BRICS equation: reflections on geopolitical and strategic dimension
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2013South Africa's entry into the Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa (BRICS) forum in 2011 alongside its membership in the trilateral forum of India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA) raises a number of issues in the nature of trends analysis. These have to do with the relationships among theDocumentLook East through Northeast: challenges and prospects for India
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2014Since the early 1990s, India has been seeking to situate the country's troubled Northeast at the heart of what eventually evolved into its so-called 'Look East' policy. The enthusiasm over the 'Look East' thrust of Indian foreign policy has also grown as Europe and the US have found themselves mired in economic stagnation with no immediate prospect of recovery.DocumentDevelopment and diplomacy through lines of credit achievements and lessons learnt
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2014In 2014, Lines of Credit (LOCs) will complete a decade as one of India's central instruments in its Development Cooperation Programme. The instrument has not only reshaped India's position as an emerging non-DAC (Development Assistance Committee) donor but also helped the country leverage its strategic and economic investments overseas.DocumentThe success of China's aerospace industry: lessons for India
Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015The emergence of China and India as major regional powers raises hope that the two could help shape the future international system and contribute differently towards Asia's development and harmony. This is in contrast to balance of power politics, which has dominated the discourse in the last few decades.DocumentCambodia’s engagement with ASEAN: lessons for Timor Leste
Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, 2007Despite obvious differences in culture and colonial history, the Cambodian engagement in ASEAN, brings a message of hope and promise to Leaders, officials and the people of Timor Leste. It is possible for this country to join ASEAN if there is a strong, visible national commitment to and understanding of ASEAN and its objectives.
