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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development in India
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Energy [r]evolution: a sustainable India energy outlook
Greenpeace International, 2012This paper is the result of a collaborative effort between Greenpeace, the European Renewal Energy Council and the Global Wind Energy Council. It presents a roadmap to attain a sustainable energy sector in India that ensures continued high economic growth.DocumentBreakthrough? China’s and India’s transition from production to innovation
Elsevier, 2007China and India have become major producers of products and services for global markets. This article explores to what extent they are also building up innovation capabilities.DocumentAfrica’s Silk Road: China and India’s new economics frontier
World Bank, 2007This report finds that Asian trade and investment in Africa hold great promise for Africa’s economic growth and development – provided certain policy reforms on both continents are implemented. It provides systematic empirical evidence on how the two emerging economic giants of Asia – China and India – now stand at the crossroads of the explosion of African-Asian trade and investment.DocumentIndia's transition to global donor: limitations and prospects (ARI)
Social Science Research Network, 2010India 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.DocumentShifting paradigm: how the BRICS are reshaping global health and development
Global Health Strategies, 2012BRICS' (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) foreign assistance spending has been growing rapidly and these countries have been exploring opportunities for more formal collaboration among themselves and with developing countries. International organisations have also started looking to the BRICS as potential donors and health innovators.DocumentThe needy donor: an empirical analysis of India’s aid motives
Social Science Research Network, 2012Although 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.DocumentChina & India as Africa's new donors: the impact of aid on development
Routledge Taylor and Francis Group, 2008This 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.DocumentIndia in Africa: implications of an emerging power for Africom and U.S. strategy
Strategic Studies Institute of the US Army War College, 2011This report examines India’s rapidly expanding network of influence in Africa. The country’s burgeoning public and private investments in the region are analysed, as well as its policies vis-à-vis African regional organisations and individual states, especially in the security sector.DocumentSouth-South cooperation in health and pharmaceuticals: emerging trends in India-Brazil collaborations
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2011Health 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.DocumentResurgent continent?: Africa and the world: emerging powers and Africa
London School of Economics, 2010Over 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.Pages
