TextPublisher: London ; New York : Zed Books, [2013]Description: 176 pages : map ; 23 cmContent type: | Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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AFRICAN COLLECTION
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Ethiopian Graduate School of Theology Library Available at Circulation Section | AFR 327.6 Car 2013 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 22054 |
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| AFR 327.172 Who 2021 Whose peace are we building? : leadership for peace in Africa / | AFR 327.6 Ale 2015 The West and China in Africa : civilization without justice / | AFR 327.6 Ale 2015 c.2 The West and China in Africa : civilization without justice / | AFR 327.6 Car 2013 The rise of the BRICS in Africa : the geopolitics of south-south relations / | AFR 327.7306 Afr 2004 African conflict resolution : management, resolution, post conflict recovery and development. / | AFR 327.7306 Jac 2018 US foreign policy in the Horn of Africa : from colonialism to terrorism / | AFR 330.9 Und 2005 Understanding civil war : evidence and analysis / |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 142-169) and index.
Abbreviations -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction : new models of globalization -- China : globalization and the rise of the state? -- South Africa : another BRIC in the wall? --- India : the geo-logics of agro-investments -- Russia : unalloyed self-interst or reflections in the mirror? -- Brazil : globalizing solidarity or legitimizing accumulation? -- Conclusion : governance and the evolution of globalization in Africa -- Notes -- Bibliography -- Index.
A little over a decade ago Africa was being spoken of in the media as the 'lost' or 'hopeless' continent. Now it has some of the fastest growing economies in the world, largely because of the impact of the BRICS: Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa. In this first book to be written about the BRICS as a collective phenomenon, Pd̀raig Carmody reveals how their engagements with Africa, both individually and collectively, are often contradictory, generating new inequalities and potential for development. Crucially, Carmody shows how the geopolitics of the BRICS countries' involvement in Africa is impacted by and impacts upon their international relations more generally, and how the emergence of these economies has begun to alter the very nature of globalization, which is no longer purely a Western-led project. -- Publisher website.
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