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Journal Article

IDS Bulletin 49.3

The BRICS Effect: Impacts of South–South Cooperation in the Social Field of International Development Cooperation

Published on 30 July 2018

The growing number of development stakeholders and initiatives in developing countries has added complexity to international development cooperation (IDC).

Recipient countries have witnessed the increasing presence of emerging countries such as the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa), offering South–South cooperation as an alternative model for development. We call the impact of the new practices of South–South cooperation providers on the prevailing IDC structure the ‘BRICS effect’ – an effect that ultimately destabilises established positions and interaction patterns between agents, and even between traditional donors and recipients. Combining the Bourdieusian notion of social fields with international relations (IR) perspectives on the changing geopolitics of international aid, this article discusses how the BRICS effect challenges established principles and practices from the field of IDC, indicating at least three dimensions: (1) new positions beyond the donor vs recipient dyad; (2) new modes of development cooperation; and (3) transformation of institutional architecture and governance mechanisms.

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This article comes from the IDS Bulletin 49.3 (2018) The BRICS Effect: Impacts of South–South Cooperation in the Social Field of International Development Cooperation

Cite this publication

Zoccal Gomes, G. and Esteves, P. (2018) 'The BRICS Effect: Impacts of South–South Cooperation in the Social Field of International Development Cooperation', in Gu, J. and Kitano, N, (eds) 'Emerging Economies and the Changing Dynamics of Development Cooperation', IDS Bulletin 49.3, Brighton: IDS

Authors

Geovana Zoccal Gomes

Paulo Esteves

Publication details

published by
Institute of Development Studies
doi
10.19088/1968-2018.152
language
English

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