000 03285nam a2200349uu 4500
001 4012215130443
003 OSt
005 20240808173845.0
008 140122s2013 bl ||||g| |0|| 0 eng d
020 _a9788576314400
090 _a4.13
_bL7324p
100 1 _96129
_aLima, Maria Regina Soares de
245 1 0 _aThe political economy of Brazilian foreign policy :
_bnuclear energy, trade and Itaipu
260 _aBrasília :
_bFundação Alexandre de Gusmão,
_c2013
300 _a444 p.
490 0 _aColeção Política Externa Brasileira
505 8 0 _t1. A political economy framework of Brazilian foreign policy
_t1.1. A critical appraisal of the Literature on Brazilian foreign policy
_t1.1.1. Sub-imperialist expansionism
_t1.1.2. The emerging power paradigm
_t1.2. Premises and assumptions of the study
_t1.3. Collective goods and international politics
_t1.3.1. The economic theory of alliances
_t1.3.2. The theory of hegemonic stability
_t1.4. Semi-periphery's international strategies: a framework of analysis
_t2. Brazilian nuclear diplomacy and the non-proliferation regime
_t2.1. The politics of control
_t2.1.1. The Baruch Plan
_t2.1.2. Brazil and the Baruch Plan
_t2.2. The politics of cooperation
_t2.3. The non-proliferation treaty
_t2.3.1. US-URSS: conflict and cooperation
_t2.3.2. Non-nuclear countries and the NPT
_t2.3.3. The negotiations of the NPT
_t2.3.4. The NPT Trade-Off
_t2.3.5. The free rider problem
_t2.4. Brazilian Niclear Policy
_t2.5. Brazilian Nuclear Diplomacy
_t2.6. Concluding remarks
_t3. The Nuclear Agreement: "breaking the rules without quite getting the bomb"
_t3.1. Brazil and the non-proliferation regime
_t3.2. The United States executive responses
_t3.2.1. The ford-Kissinger Approach
_t3.2.2. The Carter Approach
_t3.3. United States responses and North American commercial interests
_t3.4. Brazil on the offensive
_t3.5. Brazil's vulnerabilities
_t3.6. Brazil's strategic-geopolitical motivations
_t3.7. Concluding remarks
_t4. Trade diplomacy: Brazil and the "coalition of the week"
_t4.1. UNCTAD: “the coalition of the week”
_t4.2. From globalization tounconditional alignment
_t4.3. Trade diplomacy and UNCTAD
_t4.4. Trade diplomacy and GATT
_t4.5. Concluding remarks
_t5. Trade diplomacy: the price of being competitive
_t5.1. Graduation in principle and in practice: the GSP
_t5.2. Graduation in practice: the NTB codes
_t5.3. Brazil, the subsidies code, and the aftermath
_t5.4. United States-Brazilian trade agenda in the 1980s
_t5.5. Concluding remarks
_t6. The hegemonic role: the case of Itaipu
_t6.1. The setting
_t6.2. Brazil and Argentina: divergent views on the river Plate basin
_t6.3. Geopolitical rivalry and the price of the river
_t6.4. Brazil and Paraguay: in search of the good partnership?
_t6.5. Distributiom questions ad Brazilian-Paraguayan bargaining
_t6.6. A negotiated settlement
_t6.7. Concluding remarks
650 4 _911969
_a Política Externa
650 4 _911932
_a Política Econômica
650 4 _aPolítica Nuclear
_917922
650 4 _aComércio Exterior
_913489
650 4 _911990
_a Relações Internacionais
650 4 _aBrasil
_912876
650 4 _aArgentina
_913383
650 4 _aParaguai
_914099
651 4 _aBrasil
_912876
651 4 _aArgentina
_913383
651 4 _aParaguai
_914099
942 _cG
998 _a20140122
_b1513^b
_cNelson
998 _a20140214
_b1529^b
_cNelson
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c45627
_d45627
041 _aeng