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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation in India
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India - Africa Business Innovation Meeting (Intellecap)
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014The Knowledge Partnership Programme (KPP) funded by UK-DFID, in collaboration with Sankalp Forum organised a meeting to bring together the Indian and African Government leaders and business groups. The meeting included High Commissioners from Kenya and Ethiopia; and representatives from Ghana and Rwanda.DocumentIndia’s Global Resource Footprint: impact and opportunities
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014Right to food is a fundamental human right, but addressing hunger and under-nutrition are global challenges. Food output must grow by 60 per cent in order to feed a population of nine billion or more by 2050. This paper looks at the global food, energy and water scenario and future projections. It reviews India’s global resource footprint and possible implications for LICs.DocumentIndia’s development cooperation through Lines of Credit: achievement and the road ahead
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014In 2014 Lines of Credit (LOCs) will complete a decade as one of India‘s central instruments on its Development Cooperation Programme. The instrument has not only reshaped India‘s position as an emerging non-DAC donor but also helped the country leverage its strategic and economic investments overseas.DocumentDeepening India’s engagement with the least developed countries: a critical analysis of India’s Duty-free Tariff Preference Scheme
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014India became the first among emerging economies to announce a duty-free facility for LDCs. It did so during the first India-Africa Forum Summit in April 2008. This is not a coincidence, for Africa is home to 34 of the 49 LDCs, and is therefore the one region where international development efforts should be focused.DocumentScoping Study: Review on food and nutrition security: India’s domestic story and scope to build global partnerships
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014Between 1950 and 2012 India’s foodgrain production has gone up by five times, whereas its population increased during this period by roughly three and a half times.DocumentSouth-South technology transfer low carbon building technologies: market assessment report, Malawi
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014The high rate of urbanisation in Malawi puts tremendous pressure on the entire building material sector. With constraints in supply of material and demand far outstripping supply, both the quality of material and the application (house) has degraded to an alarming extent. This has resulted in poor quality and increasing construction costs.DocumentWorkshop report: Food and nutrition security: building global partnerships through South-South cooperation
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014A workshop was organised on 16th April, 2014 on ‘Food and Nutrition Security: building global partnerships through south-south cooperation’ by DFID under its Knowledge Partnership Program at India Habitat Centre, New Delhi.DocumentNutrition security of women and children in India: opportunity for building partnership with Low Income Countries (LIC)
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014Malnutrition is often incorrectly perceived merely as a food problem. Under nutrition, hunger and food insecurity are not the same thing. Malnutrition is a complex multi-determinant problem. Malnutrition is a result of impact of immediate causes of malnutrition - diet and infection.DocumentFood Security in India Scope to build global partnerships through South-South knowledge cooperation
Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014Despite many caveats, gaps and continuing challenges, there is a great deal that the Indian experience in ensuring greater food security to its people, can offer as learning to other countries of the South.DocumentBCIM economic cooperation: prospects and challenges
Centre for Policy Dialogue, Bangladesh, 2007This study is an attempt to explore the potentials for expanding trade and investment under the ambit of sub-regional cooperation comprising four contiguous countries of Eastern South Asia, which includes the two fast growing economies – India and China, and the two developing economies – Bangladesh and Myanmar (BCIM).Pages
