Introduction. -- A brief history of ties. -- Balancing between domestic and foreign policies. -- Political exchanges. -- Commercial exchanges. -- Conclusions. -- Bibliography
Summary
Focusing on Mexico and Brazil, the two biggest economies in the region, this study examines the type of interests redrawing the links between these two regions [Latin America and the GCC countries]. Through the prism of economic diplomacy, it examines whether these governments are fulfilling their economic and/or political objectives. In examining the nature of their relations, this study will adopt a comparative perspective. The first part of this study will work at the systemic level, in which the context is framed by international and regional dynamics and the features of the domestic political and economic arrangements that characterized each regime, propelling certain policies and interlinking reactions at both domestic and international levels. The second part will assess the recent exchanges in terms of how economic diplomacy is displayed (primarily through trade flow) and which factors boost the exchange between the Gulf and Brazil and Mexico
Notes
"Mar 2018"--Cover
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 19-22)
Notes
Online resource; title from PDF cover page (Doha Institute, viewed July 27, 2018)