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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation

Showing 501-510 of 581 results

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  • Document

    FDI from BRICs to LICs: Emerging Growth Driver?

    International Monetary Fund, 2011
    Despite the rapid increase in FDI flows to LICs, there have been relatively few studies that have specifically examined these flows. The paper looks at BRIC FDI to LICs with a special focus on Chinese FDI to sub-Saharan African (SSA) countries, and aims to broadly assess its macroeconomic impact using case studies.
  • Document

    South-South Cooperation in Context: Perspectives from Africa

    Future Agricultures Consortium, 2013
    FAC Working Paper 54Kojo Sebastian Amanor
  • Document

    Rising Powers in International Development: an annotated bibliography

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2013
    The Rising Powers – a category that includes the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) as well as other key countries such as Mexico, Turkey and Indonesia – are establishing themselves as an influential presence in the global development landscape, and playing an increasingly important role in shaping prospects for poverty reduction in lowincome countries.
  • Document

    Aid, trade, charade?

    Pacific Institute of Public Policy, 2010
    In recent years, there has been much re-thinking on what aid is and how it should be delivered. This paper addresses these questions and related issues from a Pacific perspective.
  • Document

    China’s Lusophone Connection

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2008
    In October 2003, Macau hosted the first ministerial meeting of the Forum for Trade and Economic Cooperation between China and Portuguese-speaking countries, bringing together high-level representatives from Angola, Brazil, Cape Verde, East Timor, Guinea-Bissau, Mozambique, Portugal, Macau and China.
  • Document

    Establishing International Development Assistance Strategy in Russia

    2010
    The paper analyses the establishment and development of the national system of international development assistance in Russia. Covering the period from 2005 to 2010, the paper examines how national priorities for international development assistance were defined, how foreign aid was increased on the threshold of Russia’s G8 Presidency, and how the emerging structure of aid governance evolved.
  • Document

    Reversal of Fortune? International Economic Governance, Alternative Development Strategies, and the Rise of the BRICS

    University of Wisconsin Law School, 2012
    This paper outlines some critiques of international trade and investment law which argued that such law is tilted in favour of developed states.
  • Document

    Building blocks for equitable growth: lessons from the BRICS

    Overseas Development Institute, 2013
    The BRICS countries have been lauded for their economic growth and resilience through the 2008/09 financial crisis; they are becoming models of development for development practitioners, researchers and other emerging economies.
  • Document

    Ghana’s relations with China

    South African Institute of International Affairs, 2008
    This policy report examines relations between Ghana and the People’s Republic of China (PRC), which established official diplomatic ties in 1960. On the second leg of Premier Wen Jiabao’s seven-nation tour of Africa in June 2007, China and Ghana issued a joint communiqué on strengthening cooperation in trade, infrastructure, telecommunications, education, health and culture.
  • Document

    Another BRIC in the wall? South Africa's developmental impact and contradictory rise in Africa and beyond

    2012
    Globalisation is transforming the nature of authority in international relations, as hegemony is replaced by geo-governance, involving a more varied set of actors. However, private authority over markets and resources is still often constituted and refracted through states.

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