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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt in India
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Adding new spices to development cooperation. Brazil, India, China and South Africa in health, agriculture and food security
Research Institute for Work and Society, KU Leuven, 2013In recent years, the four so-called emerging powers or economies - Brazil, India, China and South Africa (the BICS) - have gained considerable academic, policy and media attention for their activities in development cooperation. Some authors argue that these countries employ innovative and alternative approaches to development cooperation than the traditional, i.e. OECD-DAC donors.DocumentUnderstanding India’s global engagements: some key issues and entry points for an inclusive development agenda
Oxfam India, 2011India’s international position is one of increasing influence and assertiveness, but is also shaped by powerful constrains. Civil society in India faces opportunities and constraints of a particular and complex nature.DocumentIndia’s external aid lessons and opportunities
Economic and Political Weekly, India, 2013India has emerged as a significant player in international development cooperation in recent years. The government’s decision to put into place a new agency to deploy, measure and monitor its external development assistance is an important landmark.DocumentIndia and South Africa as partners for development in Africa?
Chatham House [Royal Institute of International Affairs], UK, 2011Identifying the overlap of interests in Africa between India and South Africa is a key element in assessing whether they can be partners for development in Africa. This paper begins with a brief discussion of Africa’s place in their respective foreign policies and the relations between the two countries. It then explores the concept of trilateral cooperation.DocumentIndia and Africa: development partnership
2012The history of India-Africa development cooperation reflects the philosophy underlying India’s engagement with other developing countries in the post-colonial period.OrganisationIndian Council of World Affairs (ICWA)
Think Tank aiming to promote India's relations with other countries through study, research, discussions, lectures, exchange of ideas and information with other organisations within and outside IndiaDocumentThe economic engagement footprint of rising powers in sub-Saharan Africa: an analysis of trade, foreign direct investment and aid flows
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2013Rising powers such as Brazil, China, India, South Africa, the Gulf states or Turkey have entered the development arena through their expanding relationships with low-income countries (LICs) . A widespread perception is that these countries are establishing new forms of engagement, mainly under a South–South cooperation framework.DocumentAfrica-BRICS cooperation: implications for growth, employment and structural transformation in Africa
UN Economic Commission for Africa, 2013What effect could trade with, and investment and aid from, the BRICS (Brazil, Russian Federation, India, China and South Africa) have on growth, employment and structural transformation in Africa? How can Africa maximize the benefits of its engagement with the BRICS, and minimize the risks?DocumentProviding development aid to Africa : comparing South Africa with China, India and Brazil
South African Foreign Policy Initiative, 2013South Africa’s planned development aid agency, South African Development Partnership Agency, is expected to be established in 2013. This provides a good opportunity to assess South Africas current role as provider of development aid to other African countries.DocumentEuropean development cooperation to 2020: challenges by new actors in international development
European Development Cooperation, 2009After 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.Pages
