Zed Book, 2013
A little over a decade ago Africa was being spoken of as the 'lost' or
'hopeless' continent in the media. Now it has some of the fastest
growing economies in the world, in large part because of the impacts of a
group of large developing countries - the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India,
China and South Africa). In this first book to be written about the
BRICS as a collective phenomenon, Carmody reveals how the BRICS powers'
engagements with Africa, both individually and collectively, are often
contradictory, generating new inequalities and potentialities 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.
A path-breaking examination of Africa's changing role in the world.
Contents:
1. Introduction: New Models of Globalisation
2. China in Africa: Globalisation and the Rise of the State?
3. South Africa: Another BRIC in the Wall?
4. India: The Geo-Logics of Agro-Investments
5. Russia: Unalloyed Self-Interest or Reflections in the Mirror?
6. Brazil: Globalising Solidarity or Legitimating Accumulation?
7. Conclusion: Governance and the Evolution of Globalisation in Africa
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