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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation
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World trade and development report: mega regionals, WTO and new issues
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2015With the Tenth WTO Ministerial Conference in Nairobi, the efforts for trade liberalisation and strengthening of multilateral trading arrangement have come to a full circle. What started in 1995 with graduation from GATT to WTO has come to a point where several challenges for multilateralism are clearly discernible.DocumentModi in Lahore: Indian and Pakistani reflections
Institute of Peace and Conflict Studies, India, 2015Prime Minister Modi’s surprising and bold stop at Lahore on his way back from inaugurating the India - financed Parliament in Kabul on December 25, 2015, ostensibly to wish Pakistani PM Nawaz Sharif on his birthday, certainly signified a clever use of symbolism to add impetus to the recently revived Indo - Pak peace process.DocumentRegion-Building and Peacebuilding in Southern Africa
Centre for Conflict Resolution, University of Cape Town (UCT), 2016The Centre for Conflict Resolution (CCR), Cape Town, South Africa, and the Friedrich Ebert Stiftung (FES) office in Gaborone, Botswana, hosted a two-day policy advisory group seminar in Gaborone, 19-20 September 2015, on “Region-Building and Peacebuilding in Southern Africa”.DocumentReflecting on the Johannesburg Summit of the Forum on China - Africa Cooperation (FOCAC): where to from here?
Institute for Global Dialogue, South Africa, 2016The FOCAC summit held between 3 - 5 December 2015 coincided with the launching of China’s second Africa policy paper and be came the first time that a FOCAC summit was held on African soil as the others had all been Ministerial gatherings following the first summit in Beijing.DocumentModi’s new foreign policy agenda and the implications for Africa
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2016The third India–Africa Forum Summit (IAFS) took place in New Delhi in October 2015, just over a year after Narendra Modi became prime minister. Situating India–Africa ties within the context of India’s evolving geopolitical calculations, which see its strategic space being defined as stretching from the Suez to the Pacific, is likely to have a significant impact on the relationship.DocumentProspects of stronger economic cooperation between the ASEAN and India: implications for the Philippines
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2015This Policy Note explores the prospects and opportunities of a dynamic ASEAN-Indian trade and investment relation. Specifically, it analyzes the greater economic relation between India and the Philippines in the services sector, particularly in information technology and business process outsourcing (IT-BPO).DocumentEast Asian regional cooperation: approaches and processes
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2002East Asia has been caught with regionalism in recent years. There has been a proliferation of bilateral and regional trading arrangement initiatives across the region.DocumentStrengthening bilateral trade and investment relationship Between Latin America and the Philippines: beyond economic diplomacy
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2004Trade with nontraditional and distant markets has always been regarded as worth exploring in an effort to increase market shares amidst the downside effects of globalization and regional trade cooperation.DocumentFinancial and Monetary Cooperation in ASEAN
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2003One result of the 1997 East Asian financial crisis was greater awareness of the need for closer financial and monetary cooperation. This paper makes an inventory of the institutional developments in this area in East Asia, with emphasis on Southeast Asia. The major issues that must resolve include:DocumentEconomic integration and regional cooperation in East Asia: a pragmatic view
Philippine Institute for Development Studies, 2005Intraregional trade and investment among the ASEAN+3 countries—and the entire East Asia—has been progressing at a robust pace over the past 25 years. The process of economic integration could be aptly described as “regionalization” or market-driven integration.Pages
