Search
Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt in South Africa
Showing 41-50 of 114 results
Pages
- Document
India 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.DocumentThe third wave of development players
Fride, 2010The Millennium Development Goals Summit in September 2010 showed a third group of a new group of development providers has quietly entered the stage. Complementing the traditional DAC donors and the big emerging economies, the CIVETS group encompassed Colombia, Indonesia, Vietnam, Egypt, Turkey and South Africa, bringing a new wave of development partnerships?DocumentThe 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.DocumentEnhancing South-South and triangular cooperation: study of the current situation and existing good practices in policy, institutions, and operation of South-South and triangular cooperation
United Nations Development Programme, 2009South-South and triangular cooperation has become a major subject of international development discussions. One of the key issues identified in such discussions is the lack of information on South-South and triangular cooperation implemented by different parties and the need to promote knowledge-sharing on the practices of South-South and triangular cooperation, especially existing good practice.DocumentBrazil as a development actor: South-South cooperation and the IBSA initiative
Fride, 2008This report looks at Brazil as a development partner, its external perception as an important and crucial country for regional stability, and projection of its global identity as a ‘voice’ for the developing world in crucial international debates.DocumentSouth Africa as a Development Partner in Africa
European Development Cooperation, 2011Engagement for Africa’s development has become a raison d’état for South African foreign policy since the end of Apartheid. The new South Africa claims to be a voice for the continent in multilateral forums like the G20 and, from April 2011 on, in the BRICS grouping (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa).DocumentThe African Standby Force External Support to an ‘African Solution to African Problems’?
Climate Change and Disasters Group, Institute of Development Studies, Sussex, UK, 2011International donors and African leaders share a belief in the need for ‘African solutions to African problems’ in the field of peace and security. As this research summary argues, their goal is to lessen Africa’s dependence on international support in preventing conflict escalation and establishing lasting peace.DocumentHow Universal is Access to Reproductive Health?: A Review of the Evidence
United Nations Population Fund, 2010This report looks at the progress of achieving MDG targets relating to reproductive health and the emphasis of this report is on identifying areas where progress has been made and where it has lagged for three indicators of access to reproductive health: adolescent birth rate, contraceptive prevalence rate and unmet need for family planning.Pages
