CFGS
Conference - "Emerging Global Challenges / G8 -
Africa Planning Meeting"
April
16-18, 2002, the Centre for Global Studies led members
of the Canadian G8 Summit team, representatives from donor
agencies, and leading African personalities involved with
the NEPAD process (New Plan for African Development) in
a conference to discuss specific strategies for integrating
Africa more constructively into the globalization process,
working within the parameters set by the G8 Summits, Millennium
Declaration and NEPAD Initiative.
The conference was held at the Rockefeller Foundation's
Bellagio Study and Conference Center in Lake Como, Italy.
"Emerging
Global Challenges" comes in follow-up to a series
of CFGS consultations during 2001 in which the Centre collaborated
with an extensive network of international
researchers to identify and prioritize actions in support
of reforms to the international governance institutions.
Participants at this years' conference had an opportunity
to revisit these recommendations in a review of the report
from last summer's 2020 Global Architecture Conference,
in Victoria, BC.
The
Emerging Global Challenges conference was made possible
with financial support from the Canadian International
Development Agency, the Ford Foundation, the Charles Stewart
Mott Foundation, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the International
Development Research Centre.
View the Conference
Agenda
View the Conference
Report
Conference Papers
Exceptionalism,
Power and the Global Architecture: Reconciling US Power
and Multilateral Institution-Building by Edward
Luck, Director, School of International and Public Affairs,
Columbia University.
Developing
Countries and a Plot to Save the Earth: Towards a Post-Johannesburg
Agenda for the South, by Adil Najam, Boston
University. View Power Point.
New
Partnership for Africas Development (NePAD): Democracy
and Political Governance Initiative by John
J. Stremlau, Professor and Head of International Relations,
University of Witwatersrand, South Africa.
The
Diplomats Malaise by David Victor, Director,
Program on Energy and Sustainable Development, Stanford
University.
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