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Searching with a thematic focus on Aid and debt, Capacity building in aid and debt in India

Showing 1-10 of 17 results

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  • Document

    Emergence of LoCs as a modality in India’s development cooperation: evolving policy context and new challenges

    Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2016
    Development cooperation is an integral part of India’s foreign policy and India has been extending cooperation to its fellow developing countries even before its independence in 1947.
  • Document

    Is Indian development cooperation taking a new direction under Modi?

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015
    Rising powers such as the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) are taking independent stands and changing the discourse on development cooperation in international fora. India has played a key role in driving this, most recently contributing to the establishment of the BRICS Development Bank and being nominated to host its first presidency.
  • Document

    National Development Banks in the BRICS: Lessons for the Post-2015 Development Finance Framework

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2015
    In 2015, the framework to succeed the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) will be agreed. As described in the outcome document of the United Nations (UN) Rio+20 conference, The Future We Want, the mobilisation and effective use of stable, sufficient and suitable development finance must be a crucial part of this framework.
  • Document

    Beyond the North-South divide: triangular cooperation in the new development cooperation

    BRICS Policy Center / Centro de Estudos e Pesquisas BRICS, 2015
    International development cooperation has been changing rapidly during the last two decades. Shifts in international power constellations and a trend towards an increasing multipolarity are reflected in development cooperation institutions and settings.
  • Document

    India’s development cooperation through Lines of Credit: achievement and the road ahead

    Knowledge Partnership Programme, 2014
    In 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.
  • Document

    Integrating gender responsive budgeting into the aid effectiveness agenda reports

    UN Women, 2009
    These research reports (one composite report and ten country reports) have been generated as part of the UNIFEM programme, 'Integrating gender responsive budgeting into the aid effectiveness agenda'. The three-year programme funded by the European Commission (EC) was launched in 2008 and consists of research and programmatic technical assistance.
  • Document

    Five fingers or one hand? The BRICS in development cooperation

    Institute of Development Studies UK, 2014
    The BRICS countries (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) are increasingly prominent in development cooperation activities in low-income countries in Africa and worldwide, presenting a potential alternative to the development aid model of traditional donors.
  • Document

    International AIDS assistance: 'new' money?

    Center for Strategic and International Studies, Washington, 2006
    Produced as a background paper to inform the conference, ‘Sustaining U.S.
  • Document

    Reality and analysis: personal and technical reflections on the working lives of six women

    Poverty, inequality and development research at Cornell University, 2004
    A group of development analysts – researchers, activists, and practitioners - engaged in an unusual exercise in early 2004. They had a dialogue about labour market, trade and poverty issues, but they preceded the dialogue with exposure to the realities of the lives of six host women in Gujarat: Dohiben, Kalavatiben, Kamlaben, Kesarben, Leelaben and Ushaben.
  • Document

    South-South collaboration picks up steam

    SciDev.Net, 2003
    Nations such as Brazil, India, South Africa and China are increasingly acknowledging that they share not only common social and economic challenges, but also common goals in international trade negotiations.

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