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INDIA-BRAZIL-SOUTH AFRICA (IBSA) (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   120413


China and IBSA: possible BRICS overreach? / Panda, Jagannath P   Journal Article
Panda, Jagannath P Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract The India-Brazil-South Africa (IBSA) forum, which was formalised in June 2003 through the adoption of the Brasilia Declaration based on the spirit of South-South solidarity, turns a decade old in 2013. The event will be celebrated at its first decadal summit in New Delhi. At the same time, this event needs to be juxtaposed with the fifth consecutive leadership summit of Brazil-Russia-India-China-South Africa (BRICS) in Durban in March 2013. Both IBSA and BRICS are in the limelight for their cross-continental politics. It has also been noted that China may have upped the ante against India by bringing South Africa into BRICS to demote IBSA as a multilateral organisation.
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2
ID:   142480


IBSA trilateralism and Southern oceans' security – evaluating India's strategic responses / Singh, Abhijit   Article
Singh, Abhijit Article
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Summary/Abstract The emergence of India–Brazil–South Africa (IBSA) as a key catalysing agent in the security affairs of the Global South is a development of deep political and strategic significance. Since 2008, the IBSA maritime exercises between India, Brazil and South Africa have played a critical security role in the South Atlantic–Southern Indian Ocean theatre, providing a foundation for a broader, more comprehensive regional initiative. The Southern oceanic littorals, however, do need not just need protection against non-traditional threats, but also a workable model of ocean governance that can revive ‘maritime development’ by kick-starting the regional marine economy and reinvigorating the civilian maritime sector. Doing so will require robust contribution from India, whose maritime agencies are well-placed to play an important security and capacity building role.
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