subject predicate object context
34360 Creator 83bce7c687ec7efa521db1e442c3d182
34360 Date 2013-02-13
34360 Is Part Of repository
34360 abstract South-South cooperation is, generally speaking, an academic construct that focuses on relations between multilateral organizations, collaboration between countries, and issues that derive from the BRICS. The driver for these questions involves development as a form of interdependence. There is also a human side to this issue. After all, interdependencies evolve not only through diplomatic brokering but also through the presence of one people in the nation of another. For this reason, migration can be favorable towards South-South cooperation, even though there is an objective basis for concern as to whether the migration of workers – along with goods – enhances cooperation or whether it provokes a competitive element.
34360 authorList authors
34360 editorList editors
34360 status peerReviewed
34360 type Article
34360 type BookSection
34360 label Mohan, Giles (2013). Migrants as agents of South-South Cooperation: the case of Chinese in Africa. In: Dargin, Justin ed. The Rise Of The Global South: Philosophical, Geopolitical and Economic Trends of the 21st Century. London: World Scientific, pp. 283–322.
34360 label Mohan, Giles (2013). Migrants as agents of South-South Cooperation: the case of Chinese in Africa. In: Dargin, Justin ed. The Rise Of The Global South: Philosophical, Geopolitical and Economic Trends of the 21st Century. London: World Scientific, pp. 283–322.
34360 Publisher ext-2ed07a51e45e4013266efe5c83ab18e9
34360 Title Migrants as agents of South-South Cooperation: the case of Chinese in Africa
34360 in dataset oro