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Searching with a thematic focus on Rising powers in international development, South-South cooperation in Brazil
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Russian BRICS Presidency: models of engagement with international institutions
International Organisations Research Journal, 2016Six years after the first summit in 2009 in Yekaterinburg, the BRICS grouping of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa has established its identity as an informal global governance forum.DocumentTrilateral cooperation in a changing international development landscape
Institute for Global Dialogue, South Africa, 2016This special edition of Global Dialogue, focused on trilateral cooperation in a changing global development landscape, forms part of a research project undertaken by the Institute for Global Dialogue (IGD), with the financial support of the United Kingdom (UK) Department for International Development (DFID).DocumentThe BRICS initiatives towards a new financial architecture: an assessment with some proposals
Research and Information System for Developing Countries, 2016It is heartening, the author of this paper argues, to observe that developing countries, led by China and other BRICS members have been successful to organise alternative sources of credit flows . aiming for financial stability, growth and development.DocumentSocial Protection for Sustainable Development: dialogues between Africa and Brazil
World Centre for Sustainable Development / RIO+ Centre, 2016Over the last few decades, Latin American countries have experienced a boom in social protection policies. This increase has been fuelled by the expansion of fiscal space as the result of steady economic growth.DocumentMonitoring and evaluation mechanisms for South-South and Triangular Development Cooperation: lessons from Brazil for the 2030 agenda
United Nations Development Programme, 2016In the past 15 years, South-South development cooperation (SSDC)1 and triangular development cooperation (TrC) have been growing in prominence as a result of an increase in resources, geographical reach andDocumentBrazilian triangular cooperation in social protection: contribution to the 2030 Agenda
United Nations Development Programme, 2016International organizations have played a crucial role in this process by supporting the diffusion and transfer of social protection policies. However, the role of South-South Cooperation partners cannot be underestimated. Brazil’s development trajectory in the last decade has drawn the world’s attention to the country’s social protection and food and nutritional security policies.DocumentTowards mutual learning with the rising powers
Institute of Development Studies UK, 2016Rising powers such as Brazil, India and China have achieved major advances in supporting economic and social development in their less-developed regions and in creating health and social protection systems in response to the rapid changes they are undergoing.DocumentThe New Development Bank: Moving the BRICS from an acronym to an institution
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2016The BRICS New Development Bank (NDB) is set to issue its first loans in the second quarter of 2016. The bank, the latest addition to the global development finance landscape, was initiated due to a number of factors in emerging economies.DocumentSocial protection for sustainable development: dialogues between Africa and Brazil
World Centre for Sustainable Development / RIO+ Centre, 2016Social protection programmes are among the most successful development experiences the world has seen in recent years. They have proven to be key in developing countries’ efforts to fight poverty and hunger, as demonstrated by the substantial progress countries such as Brazil, Ethiopia and Senegal have made in poverty reduction through the adoption and expansion of social protection schemes.DocumentMaking sustainable development the key focus of the BRICS New Development Bank
South African Institute of International Affairs, 2016As the New Development Bank (NDB) gears up to extend its first loans in the second quarter of 2016, with its self-stated aim to ‘fund infrastructure and sustainable development projects in BRICS and other emerging economies’, it is important to consider what the bank might regard as ‘sustainable development’.Pages
