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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development in India

Showing 311-320 of 498 results

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  • Document

    Building blocks for equitable growth: lessons from the BRICS

    Overseas Development Institute, 2013
    The BRICS countries have been lauded for their economic growth and resilience through the 2008/09 financial crisis; they are becoming models of development for development practitioners, researchers and other emerging economies.
  • Document

    India-Africa Economic Partnership: Trends and Prospects. Research and Information System for Developing Countries

    Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2008
    With growing internationalisation, traditional linkages between India and Africa are gradually emerging as a “dynamic and vibrant trade and investment partnership”, argue the authors of this paper, benefiting many partner economies.
  • Document

    Transforming India into a solar power

    Climate and Development Knowledge Network, 2011
    India launched the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission in 2009 to create policy conditions to make solar power as affordable as conventional power by 2022 and establish the country as global leader in solar energy.
  • Document

    Greening rural development in India

    United Nations Development Programme, 2012
    Greening rural development can stimulate rural economies, create jobs and help maintain critical ecosystem services and strengthen climate resilience of the rural poor. This report by the Ministry of Rural Development, India, with support from the United Nations Development Programme, presents strategies for inclusive rural development embodying the principles of environmental sustainability.
  • Document

    Another BRIC in the wall? South Africa's developmental impact and contradictory rise in Africa and beyond

    2012
    Globalisation is transforming the nature of authority in international relations, as hegemony is replaced by geo-governance, involving a more varied set of actors. However, private authority over markets and resources is still often constituted and refracted through states.
  • Document

    European development cooperation to 2020: challenges by new actors in international development

    European Development Cooperation, 2009
    After an exceptionally positive period in the 1990s, development cooperation policy has come under increasing pressure since the beginning of the new millennium. This paper focuses specifically on the challenges Europe faces by the emergence of new actors in international development cooperation.
  • Document

    Ethical cultures in large business organizations in Brazil, Russia, India, and China

    2011
    This study focuses on comparison of perceptions of ethical business cultures in large business organisations from four largest emerging economies, referred to as the BRICs (Brazil, Russia, India, and China), and from the US.
  • Document

    Climate change mitigation revisited: low-carbon energy transitions for China and India

    Wiley Online Library, 2009
    China and India are heavily dependent on high carbon fossil fuels. This article elaborates on the implications of low carbon energy transitions in the two countries, which can mitigate their serious contribution to climate change while allowing economic growth.
  • Document

    Competition policy reform in agriculture: a comparison of the BRICs countries

    National Council of Applied Economic Research, India, 2012
    India’s agriculture sector faces ongoing adjustment pressures as it becomes increasingly exposed to international market forces. This paper reports on the progress of an ACIAR funded project ‘Facilitating Efficient Agricultural Markets in India: An Assessment of Competition and Regulatory Reform Requirements’.
  • Document

    The developmental impact of Asian drivers on Ethiopia with emphasis on small-scale footwear producers

    Wiley Online Library, 2009
    This paper examines the developmental impact of China and India on Ethiopia by examining macro-level trade, investment and aid relations, and micro-level impacts on local small-scale footwear producers in Ethiopia. Both secondary and primary data were used in the study. At the macro level, there is clear evidence of an increase in trade between Ethiopia and China and India.

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