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Searching with a thematic focus on Finance policy in South Africa
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South Africa-China multi-lateral co-operation: BRICS and FOCAC
Centre for Chinese Studies, University of Stellenbosch, 2015The 21st Century has witnessed the emergence of a number of non-western powers, many of which have entered into formal partnerships, driven predominantly by a common development agenda. A prominent engagement within this new context is the China-South Africa relationship which, in recent years, has been strengthened through both bi-lateral exchanges as well as various multi-lateral frameworks.DocumentThe chimera of global convergence
Transnational Institute, 2014It has become a staple of conventional wisdom that global economic power is shifting inexorably towards the East and the South. Many insist that we are on the brink of a world-historic rebalancing that will result in the end of Western domination and the rise of a new hegemony.DocumentShifting power reader: critical perspectives on emerging economies
Transnational Institute, 2014Does the emergence of a multipolar global order open up policy space for alternative economic visions and pose a necessary challenge to a US and Northern-dominated global order? Or might it instead reinvigorate capitalism and exploitation by a new constellation of corporate elites?DocumentBRICS: a global trade power in a multi-polar world
Transnational Institute, 2014Central to the narrative of emerging powers, and particularly the BRICS, is the issue of trade, as both the driver of their economic surge, the factor behind their growing economies and the platform it has given them to assert influence in global governance.DocumentSouth Africa and the BRICS alliance: challenges and opportunities for South Africa and Africa
Transnational Institute, 2014South Africa under the ANC and its alliance with the BRICS promised a more moral, democratic vision of global governance, but in practice its foreign policy has been too often swayed by narrow commercial interests and short-term growth. For the past decade, Africa has experienced the longest continuous growth spurt since independence from colonialism.DocumentChina and India, “rising powers” and African development : challenges and opportunities
Nordic Africa Institute / Nordiska Afrikainstitutet, Uppsala, 2014In this report, the challenges and opportunities arising from the growing ties between two key “Rising Powers,” China and India, and Africa are more fully explored. This trend has given rise to speculative, exaggerated and ideological responses and a mixture of anxiety and hope.DocumentThe Brics and global capitalism
Transnational Institute, 2014Does the emergence of a multipolar global order open up policy space for alternative economic visions and pose a necessary challenge to a US and Northern-dominated global order? Or might it instead reinvigorate capitalism and exploitation by a new constellation of corporate elites?DocumentSouth and Southern Africa and the Indian Ocean-South Atlantic nexus: strategic and blue economy dimensions
Institute for Global Dialogue, South Africa, 2015This policy brief summarises and updates the outcome of the very first symposium devoted to exploring Indian Ocean-South Atlantic sea lanes of convergence around South Africa’s Cape of Good Hope.DocumentSouth African Futures 2035: Can Bafana Bafana still score?
Institute for Security Studies, 2015It is evident that, as much as the country has made progress, South Africa has made an incomplete transition to inclusive politics and an incomplete transition towards inclusive economics.DocumentRecalibrating South Africa’s role in global economic governance: a Nigerian perspective on some strategic challenges
Global Economic Governance Africa, 2015A Nigerian perspective on South Africa’s position in global economic governance, particularly in relation to its role in the BRICS grouping and the G-20, provides critical insights into the potential benefits of a reinvigorated Nigerian–South African partnership.Pages
