Toward a Common Standard for Aid Transparency: Discourses of Global Citizenship Surrounding the BRICS

Authors

  • James Pamment University of Texas at Austin & Karlstad University, Sweden
  • Karin Wilkins University of Texas at Austin

Keywords:

aid effectiveness, South-South cooperation, OECD, BRICS

Abstract

The impact of BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa) and other emerging economies on the field of international development has seen traditional donor nations wrestle with fundamental shifts in the geometry and makeup of the donor community. This has resulted in asymmetrical power relations in organizations such as the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) finding new modes of expression, as the one-way flows of cultural imperialism have given way to the multidirectional uncertainties of globalization. We question how the traditional aid donor community has taken this new geometry into account using discourses surrounding South-South cooperation as a focal point for analysis. The analysis engages with evolving discourses of indifference, skepticism, fear, integration, and conciliation, revealing complex tensions between the OECD’s Development Assistance Committee membership, BRICS, and the motivations for aid effectiveness debates.

Author Biographies

James Pamment, University of Texas at Austin & Karlstad University, Sweden

Post-doctoral Fellow University of Texas at Austin, USA

Karin Wilkins, University of Texas at Austin

Professor of Media Studies, Associate Director of the Center for Middle Eastern Studies, and Chair of the Global Studies Bridging Disciplines ProgramUniversity of Texas at Austin, USA

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Published

2016-06-28

Issue

Section

Special Sections