1st Edition

BRICS and Global Governance

Edited By John Kirton, Marina Larionova Copyright 2018
    308 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    308 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    The past few decades have witnessed the development of an increasingly globalised and multipolar world order, in which the demand for multilateralism becomes ever more pronounced. The BRICS group established in 2009, has evolved into a plurilateral summit institution recognized both by sceptics and proponents as a major participant in the international system.

    Addressing the BRICS’s role in global governance, this book critically examines the club’s birth and evolution, mechanisms of inter-BRICS cooperation, its agenda priorities, BRICS countries’ interests, decisions made by members, their collective and individual compliance with the agreed commitments, and the patterns of BRICS engagement with other international institutions. This volume advances the current state of knowledge on global governance architecture, the BRICS role in this system, and the benefits it has provided and can provide for world order.

    This book will interest scholars and graduate students who are researching the rise and role of emerging powers, global governance, China and India’s approach to global order and relationship with the United States, Great Power politics, democratization as a foreign policy strategy, realist theory-building and hegemonic transitions, and the (crisis of) liberal world order.

    Part I: Introduction

    1 The Rise of New Institutions

    Marina Larionova

     

    Part II: The Evolving Institutional Identity of The BRICS

    2 Explaining the Solid, Strengthening Success of the BRICS Summit

    John J. Kirton

    3 BRICS Engagement with International Institutions for Better Governance

    Andrey Shelepov

    4 Political Dynamics within the BRICS in the Context of Multilayered Global Governance

    Maria Raquel Freire

     

    Part III: The BRICS Contribution to Global Governance

    5 The New Development Bank in Global Finance and Economic Architecture

    Alexandra Morozkina

    6 BRICS Financial and Payment Arrangements: A Locus of Intra-Group Trade Development

    Natalia Khmelevskaya

    7 The BRICS Security Agenda: Russia’s Approach and the Outcomes of the Ufa Summit

    Victoria V. Panova

    8 BRICS and Non-traditional Security

    Niall Duggan

    9 Prospects for Cooperation in Science, Technology and Innovation among the BRICS Members

    Michael Kahn

     

    Part IV: BRICS Interests and Priorities for Cooperation

    10 BRICS for Better Global Governance: A Russian Perspective

    Georgy Toloraya

    11 The BRICS Agenda in the Asia-Pacific Region

    Haibin Niu

    12 South Africa in BRICS: Last But Not Least

    Vladimir Shubin

    13 BRICS Regional Policy in Africa

    Tatiana Deych

     

    Part V: Conclusion

    14 Looking into the Future of the BRICS

    Marina Larionova

    Biography

    Marina Larionova, Center for International Institutions Research (CIIR), Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration (RANEPA).

    John J. Kirton, Munk School of Global Affairs, Trinity College, Department of Political Science, University of Toronto.

    "This book presents an excellent update on BRICS which has come to be an exemplar of contemporary plurilateral summit institutions. Critical analysis by eminent researchers from four continents brings out various key features of BRICS: mission, values, agenda, evolving institutional identity, compliance performance and models of engagement with international organizations and so on. They reveal to us its success factors for such an enduring performance across global summitry that underscores the shared interests and priorities of BRICS nations. This multidisciplinary study produced by two celebrated editors is a convincing evidence that despite distinct historical, political, economic and cultural contexts, the future cooperation of the BRICS as a concert of equals remains grounded in its members’ shared values and goals." - Swaran Singh, Professor, School of International Studies, Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi

    "The value of this book rests squarely on its distinctive mix of contributors, impressive experts situated both within the BRICS countries and beyond. Taking issue with the sceptics, Kirton and Larionova have mobilized a valuable countervailing analysis highlighting the BRICS relative success in performance with respect to global governance." - Andrew F. Cooper, Professor, the Balsillie School of International Affairs and the Department of Political Science, University of Waterloo.