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ECONOMIC COOPERATION AND DEVELOPMENT (3) answer(s).
 
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ID:   019596


Globalization and policy convergence / Drezner Daniel W 2001  Article
Drezner Daniel W Article
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Publication 2001.
Description 53-80
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2
ID:   139039


Governing cyberspace through constructive ambiguity / Cornish, Paul   Article
Cornish, Paul Article
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Summary/Abstract At its simplest, cyberspace is a global medium for communication and information exchange between computers and their human operators, an environment (of sorts) in which it is possible for digital signals to be sent, received and processed. Like other communications media, the operating conceit of cyberspace is that it should be indifferent to the quality and meaning of the traffic it carries. It comes as no surprise, then, that cyberspace can be a vehicle for challenge, insecurity, instability, crime and competition. But it can just as often signify opportunity: commercial, economic, cultural, political, social and even moral, in terms of individual human fulfilment.
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3
ID:   139006


Towards convergence and cooperation in the global development finance regime: closing Africa's policy space? / Kragelund , Peter   Article
Kragelund , Peter Article
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Summary/Abstract The revival of China's interest in Africa is often highlighted as being an opportunity to provide African governments with a choice between development partners that may strengthen negotiation leverage and thereby carve out policy space to define and implement policies that affect social and economic development. This article critically reviews the most recent developments in Chinese and Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) approaches to development finance to Africa. It argues that although we can detect a number of incidents that point towards more policy space for African governments, the revival of China's development finance does not fundamentally alter the power relations between African countries and their financiers, as the tendency now is towards convergence and cooperation between China and Development Assistance Committee (DAC) donors—not divergence and competition, which could have created policy space as it did prior to the end of the Cold War. This follows the trend of other ‘emerging’ donors who increasingly play by DAC rules and thereby minimize the future possibility of playing out one partner against the other.
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