ABSTRACT

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|19 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|19 pages

The rise of new institutions

part III|98 pages

The BRICS contribution to global governance

chapter 6|23 pages

BRICS financial and payment arrangements

A locus of intragroup trade development

chapter 7|21 pages

The BRICS security agenda

Russia’s approach and the outcomes of the Ufa Summit

part IV|78 pages

BRICS interests and priorities for cooperation

chapter 10|21 pages

The BRICS for better global governance

A Russian perspective

chapter 12|19 pages

South Africa in the BRICS

Last but not least

chapter 13|23 pages

BRICS regional policy in Africa

part V|10 pages

Conclusion