45 research outputs found
DEVELOPING FROM THE SOUTH: SOUTH-SOUTH COOPERATION IN THE GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT GAME
Este artigo analisa a ascensão da cooperação Sul-Sul como alternativa à tradicional prestação de ajuda externa por agências pertencentes ao Comitê de Assistência ao Desenvolvimento da Organização para a Cooperação e Desenvolvimento Econômico. Ele acompanha a ascensão da cooperação Sul-Sul e coloca-a no contexto das abordagens contemporâneas de programação do desenvolvimento, argumentando que há lições valiosas para o Norte nesta abordagem guiada pelo Sul para o desenvolvimento.This paper looks at the rise of South-South cooperation as an alternative to traditional foreign aid provision by member agenices of the OECD's Development Assistance Committee. It tracks the rise of South-South cooperation and places it in the context of contemporary approaches to development programming, arguing that there are valuable lessons for the North in this Southern-driven approach to development
Hegemonia consensual: por uma teorização sobre a Política Externa Brasileira no pós-Guerra Fria
As abordagens convencionais sobre hegemonia enfatizam elementos de coerção e exclusão, características que não explicam adequadamente o mecanismo de crescimento de vários projetos regionais ou as características das políticas externas dos poderes emergentes. Este artigo desenvolve o conceito de hegemonia consensual, explicando como uma estrutura pode ser articulada, disseminada e mantida sem recorrer à força para recrutar a participação de outros atores. A ideia central é a construção de uma visão estrutural, ou hegemonia, que inclui específica e nominalmente subordinação, que engajam em um processo de diálogo e interações, causando a subordinação das partes para absorverem apropriadamente a substância e os requisitos da hegemonia como seus próprios. A utilidade da hegemonia consensual como instrumento analítico, especificamente para o estudo do regionalismo e das políticas externas dos mercados e poderes emergentes, é demonstrada pela política externa brasileira no pós-Guerra Fria, indicando para ambos como a hegemonia consensual pode ser perseguida e onde fundam-se os limites naturais de suas ideias-base
Crop Updates 2002 - Cereals
This session covers thirty one papers from different authors:
VARIETIES AND BREEDING
1. Agronomic evaluation of wheat and barley in the central wheatbelt of Western Australia, Peter Burgess1and Gary Fawell2, 1Agritech and 2Farmanco Management
2. Evaluating stress tolerance to terminal drought by Western Australian wheats, Dean Diepeveen and Dr Tim Setter, Department of Agriculture
3. Broadscale wheat variety comparisons featuring Wyalkatchem, Jeff Russell, Department of Agriculture
4. Australian crop accreditation system variety selector, Tony Seymour, Australian Crop Accreditation System
5. Future wheat varieties, Robin Wilson, Iain Barclay,Robyn McLean, Robert Loughman, Jenny Garlinge, Bill Lambe, Neil Venn and Peter Clarke, Department of Agriculture
AGRONOMY
6. Beware of wheat variety interactions with row spacing and seed rate, Mohammad Amjad and Wal Anderson, Department of Agriculture
7. Yield and falling numbers of wheat varieties on the South Coast, Mohammad Amjad and Wal Anderson, Department of Agriculture
8. Maximising wheat variety performance through agronomic management, Wal Anderson, Raffaele Del Cima, James Bee, Darshan Sharma, Sheena Lyon, Melaine Kupsch, Mohammad Amjad, Pam Burgess, Veronika Reck, Brenda Shackley, Ray Tugwell, BindiWebb and Steve Penny Jr, Department of Agriculture
9. High impact of soil type and seasonal rainfall on optimum wheat seed rate , Raffaele Del Cima and Wal Anderson Department of Agriculture
10. 101 seasons in one day: Using the ‘WA Wheat’ database to predict wheat yield, James Fisher1, Bill Bowden1, Craig Scanlan1, Senthold Asseng2and Michael Robertson2 1Department of Agriculture, 2CSIRO
11. Economics of improving compact soils, M.A. Hamza1, G. McConnell2and W.K. Anderson1, 1Department of Agriculture, 2Planfarm
12. Reducing the risks in producing durum wheat in Western Australia, Md Shahajahan Miyan and Wal Anderson, Department of Agriculture
13. Taking the Why out of Wyalkatchem – the new widely adopted wheat variety, Steve Penny, Department of Agriculture
14. Influence of nutrition and environmental factors on seed vigour in wheat, Darshan Sharma, Wal Anderson and Daya Patabendige, Department of Agriculture
NUTRITION
15. N and K are important for oat yield and quality, Patrick Gethin, Stephen Loss, Tim O’Dea, Ryan Guthrie and Lisa Leaver, CSBP Futurefarm
16. Effects of nitrogen and phosphorus on the grain yield and quality of noodle wheat, Tyrone Henning1, Lionel Martin1and Wal Anderson2 1Muresk Institute of Agriculture, 2Department of Agriculture
17. Assessment of a high input fertiliser regime on the yield and quality of Gairdner barley, Narelle Hill1, Simon Wallwork2and Laurence Carslake2 1Department of Agriculture, 2Wesfarmers Landmark
18. The use of Flexi-N to achieve high yielding, high protein wheat, Darren Hughes1, Lionel Martin1, Wal Anderson2and Stephen Loss3 1Muresk Institute of Agriculture, 2Department of Agriculture, 3CSBP Futurefarm
19. Are liquid phosphorus fertilisers more efficient than solid fertilisers in Western Australia?Stephen Loss, Lisa Leaver, Ryan Guthrie, Patrick Gethin and Tim O’Dea, CSBP Futurefarm
20. Oats respond to phosphorus and potassium, Glenn McDonald, Department of Agriculture
PESTS AND DISEASES
21. Cereal disease diagnostics and rust monitoring, Nichole Burges and Dominie Wright, Department of Agriculture
22. Distribution and incidence of aphids and barley yellow dwarf virus in over-summering grasses in the Western Australian wheatbelt, Jenny Hawkes and Roger Jones, Centre for Legumes in Mediterranean Agriculture and Department of Agriculture
23. Spring sprays for powdery mildew control in cereals, Kith Jayasena1, Kazue Tanaka1, Vanessa Johnson1, Robert Loughman1and Josh Jury2 1Department of Agriculture, 2Wesfarmers Landmark
24. Impact of root lesion nematodes on wheat and triticale in Western Australia, Sean Kelly and Shashi Sharma, Department of Agriculture
25. Cropping options for the management of root lesion nematodes in Western Australia, Sean Kelly, Shashi Sharma and Robert Loughman, Department of Agriculture
26. Cereal rust update 2002 – new stem rust on Camm wheat, Robert Loughman1and Robert Park2 1Department of Agriculture, 2University of Sydney
27. Cereal aphids and direct feeding damage to cereals, Phil Michael, Department of Agriculture
28. A decision support system for control of aphids and BYDV in cereal crops, Debbie Thackray, Jenny Hawkes and Roger Jones, Department of Agriculture and Centre for Legumes in Mediterranean Agriculture
STORAGE
29. Aeration – opportunity for profit, Christopher Newman, Department of Agriculture
CLIMATE
30. Financial impact of frost on the Western Australian grains industry, Garren Knell and Kim Povey, ConsultAg
31. Summary of 2001 weather and seasonal prospects for 2002, David Stephens, Department of Agricultur
Courting the South: Lula’s Trade Diplomacy
Scholarly consensus regarding Brazil's Lula government characterizes its economic policy as surprisingly conservative but its foreign policy as roughly in line with the traditionally leftist principles of the Workers' Party. While broadly accurate, this perspective tells us little about trade diplomacy, which cuts across these two policy areas. In this article we explain why Lula's trade diplomacy has hewed much more closely to his broader foreign policy strategy than his economic model, despite the critical role of trade in Brazil's recent economic growth. We argue that two key factors have lowered the costs of adopting a combative, South-South orientation, allowing Lula to use trade diplomacy as a tool for appealing to party loyalists. One is the inherently muted short-term impact of trade diplomacy on key macro-economic outcomes. The other is the failure of the traditional trading powers to offer the incentives necessary to successfully conclude the major North-South trade talks they had initiated
Differentiation theory and the ontologies of regionalism in Latin America
Abstract In this article, we argue that conventional understandings of regional integration based on neo-functionalism, hitherto often used to describe the diverse projects of Latin American regionalism, are of limited utility in that context. Rather than representing processes of economic or political unification, the various regionalisms could be understood more productively as a reaction to the crisis in legitimacy that social orders in the region have experienced under the conditions of globalized modernity. We then deploy an understanding of regionalism derived from sociological differentiation theory in order to advance this argument