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Searching with a thematic focus on Peacebuilding, Conflict and security, Rising powers in international development in Brazil
Showing 1-6 of 6 results
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Co-operation in the South Atlantic Zone: amplifying the African agenda
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2015South Africa’s foreign policy prioritises peaceful and sustainable growth in Africa by maximising its external engagements in increasingly strategic ways.DocumentRising powers and the African security landscape
Chr. Michelsen Institute, Norway, 2014As the rising powers of China, Brazil, India and South Africa extend their economic engagement in Africa, they are also gradually becoming more involved in the African peace and security agenda. The four articles in this report describe and analyse how these rising powers are engaging with the African security landscape:DocumentBrazil: a new powerhouse without military strength?
BRICS Policy Center / Centro de Estudos e Pesquisas BRICS, 2013Brazil’s development assistance to Africa demonstrates that its action abroad is based on soft power tools, especially when dealing with countries of the South, benefiting from its image as successful economic and social development model, remaining faithful to its national principles like non-intervention and respect of sovereignty and exporting efforts that worked at a domestic level.DocumentImplementing the responsibility to protect: new directions for international peace and security?
Igarape Institute, 2013The international peace and security architecture is undergoing a profound renovation in the twenty first century. The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine is being re-evaluated from political and operational perspectives, while the Responsibility while Protecting (RwP), a Brazilian initiative, can be a new direction for international peace and security.DocumentBrazil’s experience in unstable settings: assessing the participation of Brazilian experts in multilateral missions
Igarape Institute, 2012Since at least the early 1990s Brazil has provided military police and civilian experts to UN missions around the world. The current paper highlights that Brazil is increasingly involved in international missions that promote the transition to democracy, support macro-economic stability and seek conflict prevention and poverty reduction.DocumentBeyond the new deal: global collaboration and peacebuilding with BRICS countries
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2014Development in fragile and conflict-affected contexts is both complex and contested. The New Deal for Engagement with Fragile States, endorsed by 35 countries and six organisations, is the current focus of efforts to harmonise aid approaches.
