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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development

Showing 351-360 of 1417 results

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  • Document

    Capital flows in the quantitative easing era: building resilience in emerging economies

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    Unconventional Monetary Policies (UMPs), initially designed to resuscitate domestic growth in advanced economies, have now permeated into the deepest cracks of the global financial system.
  • Document

    India's NSG membership: examining the relationship between NPT and the NSG

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2015
    The Nuclear Suppliers Group (NSG)'s annual plenary sessions, since 2011 to date, have seen discussions on India's relationship with the Group.
  • Document

    Indo-US cvil nuclear cooperation agreement: implementation hurdles

    Observer Research Foundation, New Delhi, 2005
    India signed a landmark strategic agreement having far reaching consequences with the United States during Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's summit meeting with President George W. Bush on July 18, 2005. Of the two major facets of the agreement, the first was the belated acceptance of India as a 'responsible state with advanced nuclear technology'.
  • Document

    Developmental regimes in Africa - synthesis report

    Africa Power and Politics (APP) / Developmental Regimes in Africa (DRA), 2015
    In 2012, two large research programmes reported final results that shed new light on fundamental questions about the past and future development of Africa.
  • Document

    BRICS: emergence of health agenda

    International Organisations Research Institute, 2014
    Health is an indispensable public good. At the national level, it has been manifested in the commitment of the BRICS members of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa to scale up health financing. At the global level, it is evidenced by the international community progress on the three health-related Millennium Development Goals.
  • Document

    Cambodia: between China and Japan

    Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, 2009
    China and Japan play a significant role in socio-economic development in Cambodia particularly in terms of infrastructure and human resources development. Cambodia has stronger economic relations with China than Japan. Japan plays more important role than China in terms of peace building and national reconstruction of Cambodia in the post conflict period.
  • Document

    Puzzling over the pieces: regional integration and the African Peer Review Mechanism

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2015
    Regional integration has long been recognised as an important vehicle for Africa’s development; currently, the African Union (AU) officially intends achieving a continent-wide common market by 2023 and a currency union by 2018. One of the goals of the African Peer Review Mechanism (APRM), the continent’s indigenous governance assessment system, is to promote regional integration.
  • Document

    Crouching tiger, hidden dragon? China and Africa: engaging the world's next superpower

    Centre for Conflict Resolution, University of Cape Town (UCT), 2007
    Chinese trade and assistance to Africa resumed markedly at the end of the Cold War and has grown exponentially since. China’s pragmatic policy focus on economic issues in Africa has been met with rising concern by other powers, notably the United States and European countries such as France, which have had to reassess their relations with the continent as a result.
  • Document

    How can ASEAN centrality in East Asian community be maintained?

    Cambodian Institute for Cooperation and Peace, 2012
    Although the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is the hub of regionalism in East Asia, ASEAN centrality is under pressure of this regionalization process.
  • Document

    Taming the Dragon? Defining Africa's Interests at the Forum on China-Africa Co-operation (FOCAC): seminar report

    Centre for Conflict Resolution, University of Cape Town (UCT), 2009
    China is an increasingly influential actor in international relations, as its economy and geo-political interests continue to expand. African countries will continue to be important to Beijing, as China’s phenomenal economic growth is likely to increase its demand for Africa’s strategic resources, notwithstanding the global financial crisis of 2008/2009.

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