Related Papers
Building Cooperation between the BRICS and Leading Industrialized States
2013 •
Jonathan Luckhurst
This article examines relations between the BRICS and leading industrialized states. It starts by analyzing the former's mutual relations, focusing on how the ideational construct presented by Jim O'Neill in his “BRIC hypothesis” became formalized as a leader-level diplomatic group at a summit in Yekaterinburg, Russia, in 2009. I evaluate how the BRICS have influenced international issues and whether “cooperation” or “conflict” characterizes their relations with key industrialized states, concluding that there has been greater multilateral cooperation since 2008, especially through international forums such as the G20. The BRICS partnership is one of unequals, significant for international economic relations primarily due to China. This has had important consequences as the Chinese government has prioritized economic cooperation with leading industrialized states. Influential countries can continue to benefit by enhancing multilateral ties in what are often nonzero–sum situations.
The BRICS Introduction 2: Brics and the New World Order
David G. Ebhohimen AICMC
BRICS Strategic Alliance: A Roadmap Ahead
2013 •
Sapna Taneja
6th BRICS SUMMIT - EMERGENCE OF A COUNTERWEIGHT IN THE INTERNATIONAL FISCAL ARENA
Dr. E. Dilipraj
BRICS Studies and Documents
FUNAG - Fundação Alexandre de Gusmão, Adriana Erthal Abdenur
This is the English translation of the book "BRICS: estudos e documentos", published in 2015 by FUNAG. The book brings comprehends the reasons that led Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa to come together and seek dialogue regarding issues of global development. The BRICS are a consolidated coordination and cooperation mechanism, in a common effort in favor of the international system, multilateralism and the capacity to reach sustainable human development globally. Author: Renato Baumann Flávio Damico Adriana Erthal Abdenur Maiara Folly Carlos Márcio Cozendey Renato G. Flôres Jr.
The Summit for the Establishment of the Silk Road Forum
Roie Yellinek
On May 14-15, 2017, Chinese President Xi Jinping conducted a summit on the Chinese initiative to connect Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and Asia. In attendance were high-ranking representatives from Egypt, Iran, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Turkey, Syria, and Tunisia. The object of the summit was to clarify the Chinese initiative in the wake of uncertainty that has surrounded it ever since it was announced by Xi in 2013. Israel was not included in the summit, but is nevertheless very much in the picture.
Magazine d'Anticipation Politique (MAP), vol. 6: EuroBRICS, May 2012, p. 12.
L. Okuneva. Russia and Brazil in the BRICS group - future ambitions, by Liudmila Okuneva, in MAP 6: EuroBRICS, May 2012, p. 12.
Liudmila Okuneva
Edito Euro-BRICS Partnership : The path to the world after the crisis (p.3) – Institutions Results of the fourth BRICS summit and the outlook for cooperation between the BRICS and the European Union (p.5) – Frame of Reference Extract from the conclusions of the Euro-BRICS Process founding seminar (p.7) – Strategic Partnership Prospects of a EuroBRICS strategic cooperation: a view from Brazil (p.9) – Geopolitics Russia and Brazil in the BRICS group - future ambitions (p.12) – Economy The Role of Euro-BRICS cooperation (p.14) – Trade BRICS cooperation serving trade policy formation and the priorities of BRICS and Euro-BRICS cooperation (p.20) – Monetary System China’s Policymakers One Inch Closer to Opening Capital Account (p.22) – Education Prospects for collaboration in the knowledge economy field (p.25) – REPORT : Aerospace The European path to space is via China and Russia (p.27) – Aerospace Euro-BRICS and sovereign technologies: Space (p.29) – Aerospace Europe, BRICS and Space: A contribution to the debate on Euro-BRICS cooperation in space activities (p.31)
Journal of Liberty and International Affairs
The Politics Underpinning the Brics Expansion
2022 •
Sukalpa Chakrabarti
BRICS: The New Platform for Global Economic Restructuring
Tridib Chakraborti
The genesis of BRIC (Brazil-Russia-India-China, predecessor of present-day BRICS) as a multilateral grouping of the four developing or emerging economies can be traced back to September 2006, with the 61st Session of the United Nations General Assembly in New York, in a bid to explore measures of economic and political cooperation among the member-States. Officially, the organization came into existence in 2009, and with the inclusion of South Africa as the fifth member in April 2011, BRIC was rechristened BRICS. Till date, the BRICS member-states have held seven Summits and the latest in Ufa, Russia (July 2015) has been a watershed with the entry into force of the New Development Bank/BRICS Bank and the Contingent Reserves Arrangement. The BRICS Bank is heralded as an alternative to the World Bank-International Monetary Fund-led international economic architecture. However, it remains to be testified whether the BRICS Bank can evolve as a pulsating alternative to the WB-IMF-led financial system, though there is no way denying its establishment as a stepping stone for providing a predominantly South-South economic cooperative mechanism.
Vestnik RUDN. International Relations
The BRICS: Paradigm Shift in Dealing with New Challenges
2019 •
Boris Martynov
The mankind has been actively using a relatively new geopolitical space: the space of information. Obviously, the economic and scientific progress opens new horizons and possibilities, still not clearly understood by people. This brings about many changes, with either good or bad consequences, depending on who uses the information and what aims are pursued. The present system of international relations is characterized by many new features; it’s becoming more “unpredictable” and “chaotic”. Information wars and “fake” news contribute in its turn to the turbulent character of international relations, pushing forward misconceptions and distorted visions of different situations, and thus provoking conflicts. At the same time, the world is badly short of new ideas, which could more adequately answer the global problems. These new ideas could hardly be produced by the “old”, traditional actors. At the same time, the BRICS countries, representing the new “ascending” civilizations of non-We...