Brazil as an Emerging Power: The View from the United States

Attention: open in a new window. PDFPrintE-mail

Brazil as an Emerging Power: The View from the United States

by Shannon O’Neil
SAIIA Policy Briefing, No 16, February 2010
Download - English [.pdf]

Emerging Powers and Africa Programme

The United States has always seen Brazil as a significant regional powerhouse, but its perceived importance has risen in the last decade. Because of its economic strength, its hemispheric leadership and its growing geostrategic role through multilateral international forums, it has become a vital player in regional and global politics across numerous dimensions. While US recognition of Brazil’s political and economic emergence brought to the fore the question of how Washington should manage relations with Brasilia, translating this new awareness into concrete bilateral policies and partnerships remains difficult. It is unclear whether the US and Brazil will be willing and able to form a ‘special relationship’.

SAIIA sincerely thanks those who acted as peer reviewers for these papers.

Email updates

Call For Papers

SAJIA Call for Papers

Upcoming events

9 Sep 2010 - China in Africa, Sino-Mozambican relations at a crossroads, Indy Village, Maputo
16 Sep 2010 - Internalizing sustainability for a low-carbon future: the case of a South African business, The Centre for the Book, Cape Town

SAIIA Spotlight

Climate Change and Trade: The Challenges for Southern Africa

 

img_bcf_climate_change_lg

The long-awaited Copenhagen summit on climate change gave to the world a broad political agreement, but without any teeth. Meanwhile concerns over the climate change agenda finding its way into the multilateral trading system are growing, at a time when the trading system is struggling to find its own feet.

more>
Bookmark and Share


© SAIIA 2008; NPO:058-556 Site maintained by BIG Media