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Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional, Volume: 63, Issue: 2, Published: 2020
  • The Chinese South-South development cooperation: an assessment of its structural transformation Article

    Vadell, Javier; Brutto, Giuseppe Lo; Leite, Alexandre Cesar Cunha

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract This paper aims to analyze the Chinese cooperation with developing countries, its purposes, shapes and intentions in order to explore the peculiar characteristics of Chinese SSC. This work seeks to analyze whether the cooperation carried out by China with countries of the Global South fits the principles of South-South cooperation and if and how China is modifying the international aid regime.
  • From poverty reduction to global challenges, a new horizon for international development cooperation? Article

    Orliange, Philippe Andre

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract The adoption of the Sustainable Development Goals, The Paris Agreement on Climate Change and the Addis Ababa Action Agenda laid the foundations of a new system of international development cooperation in which middle income countries are playing an increasingly important role, National Development Banks are becoming key players although broadly consensual regulatory framework are still insufficient.
  • From the paradigmatic to the practical battlefield: Southern development cooperation practices in a traditional aid hosting context Article

    Moreira, Alvaro

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract This article discusses the effects of the introduction of South-South Cooperation (SSC) practices in a traditional aid-hosting context. Using a Bourdieusian approach, it shows that SSC practices encountered traditional aid practices embodied in host actors’ engagement within SSC initiatives. Such encounters engendered a practical mismatch that affected SSC projects. The effects of the practical battle on project implementation underscores the determining role of host actors in shaping development cooperation practices. Finally, this article argues that changes in development cooperation practice, in contrast to changes in development cooperation paradigms, depend more on the hosts than on the donors and providers’ agenda.
  • Enlarging the donor base: an analysis of the World Food Programme’s reform process and the Brazilian bridge diplomacy Article

    Lima, Thiago; Santana, Jenifer Queila

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract Brazil became one of the world’s largest food donors after the WFP went through a reform process. The reform allowed non-traditional donors to donate food provided that other partners paid for logistical costs. We analyzed the reform process through documental analysis and interviews to understand Brazil’s role in this. The results show that both actors had complementary interests. However, whilst Brazil had ambitions of prominence in this area, it adopted a rule-taker position. The WFP’s Secretariat was the main driving force in the process and, to some extent, co-opted Brazil.
  • International Organizations diffusion in South-South Cooperation dynamics. Notes on the Uruguayan case in the 21st Century Article

    Morasso, Carla; Lamas, Lorena

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract The scenario of International Development Cooperation has been transformed in the new century by the increase of South-South Cooperation (SSC). In response, the North has deployed its influence through International Organizations (IO) to moderate and model the agendas and institutions of the South. Uruguay is a good example of how IOs’ interests and methodologies have influenced cooperation strategies and institutionalization processes in developing countries through diffusion mechanisms.
  • Patterns of Official Development Assistance in Tajikistan: effects on growth and poverty reduction Article

    Abduvaliev, Mubinzhon; Bustillo, Ricardo

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract The aim of this paper is to assess the effect of official development assistance on economic growth and poverty reduction in Tajikistan, as well as to examine the recent role of South-South Cooperation. We used a panel data set on economic growth and poverty estimates in Tajikistan, and found that a 1% increase of official development assistance provoked a 1.6% rise in per capita GDP and a 0.48% decrease in poverty levels in Tajikistan. Despite the increased relevance of South-South Cooperation in Tajikistan, the current bilateral cooperation pattern does not allow us to think South–South aid will create employment and growth opportunities.
  • Sharing responsibility: jeopardised multilateralism and the growing centrality of Triangular Cooperation Article

    Zoccal, Geovana

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract Multipolarity is casting doubt on the notion of responsibility, and diffused reciprocity of the multilateral system of international development cooperation is falling short. In midst of this crisis, what are possible mechanisms to foster the implementation of the 2030 Agenda? I argue that Triangular Cooperation, through specific reciprocity, presents opportunity for nurturing partnerships and enhancing models to share responsibilities toward international development cooperation. Looking into recent trends of TrC, I argue that through this modality, DAC countries push for greater involvement of the South, and Southern providers share responsibility towards international development.
  • Development finance with Chinese characteristics: financing the Belt and Road Initiative Article

    Liu, Hongsong; Xu, Yue; Fan, Xinzhu

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is clearly aimed at international development, and designed to jointly build a regional economic cooperation framework that is open, inclusive and balanced. Financial integration is the cornerstone of the BRI, and development finance is the most widely used mode of cooperation in financing. Development finance with Chinese characteristics is concessional and development-oriented, differing from Official Development Finance (ODF) defined by the OECD. Based on its development experiences, China applies development finance with Chinese characteristics to the BRI projects. This benefits countries along the Belt and Road by facilitating their sustainable development.
  • Negotiating accountability in South-South Cooperation: the case of Brazil Article

    Waisbich, Laura Trajber

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract The increased political significance of South-South Cooperation (SSC), globally and within Brazilian Foreign Policy, has produced a variety of SSC accountability-related disputes. This paper unpacks the ways in which accountability has been problematised and negotiated in the last decade between the competing stakeholders and publics of Brazilian SSC along three intersecting dimensions: geopolitical, bureaucratic and state-society relations.
  • The OECD enlargement in Latin America and the Brazilian candidacy Article

    Mello, Flavia de Campos

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract This article examines the OECD’s enlargement process as an important dimension for understanding global economic governance. It focuses on the Brazilian candidacy, stemming first from the OECD’s strategies towards the BRICS countries, but also towards Latin America, where the organization’s enlargement has expanded its members in a matching process with the incorporation of European countries. The OECD became a high priority for Brazil in the context of a significant change of orientations on economic reforms and foreign policy choices. By looking at the experience of Latin American countries regarding their accession processes to the OECD, the article concludes referring to the organization as an expanding Western-led institution aimed at promoting a liberal economic agenda through enhanced global governance mechanisms.
  • Development policy from a systemic perspective: changes, trends and its future role within a broader framework for transnational co-operation Article

    Klingebiel, Stephan; Gonsior, Victoria

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract Over the past decade a number of changes can be observed within the development policy system. This paper presents and discusses these changes along three dimensions: narratives, strategies and operational approaches. Changes are manifold, ranging from the application of new narratives, such as the migration narrative, to alternations in strategic objectives (e.g. developing countries’ graduation issues), new instruments (in the form of development finance at the interface with the private sector), and the application of new concepts for project implementation (e.g. through frontier technologies). We discuss the implications and effects of these changes for the current and potential future role of the development policy system, as well as preliminary ideas for a concept of global co-operation for sustainable development (GCSD), spanning beyond the development policy system.
  • Regulated Improvisations: bringing the private sector back into the International Development Cooperation field Article

    Esteves, Paulo; Soares, Frederico Lamego de Teixeira

    Abstract in English:

    Abstract This article questions why and how the private sector was articulated as a legitimate agent in a field almost entirely dominated, until the 2000s, by DAC donors. We argue that private agents were admitted in the field across the fractures produced by SSCP and throughout a series of normative and managerial adjustments, which we called here regulated improvisations.
  • International Development Cooperation and Multipolarity: Scrambling North and South? Editorial

    Esteves, Paulo; Zoccal, Geovana
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