AbstractThe Brandt Line is a way of visualising the world that highlights the disparities and inequalities between the wealthy North and the poorer Global South. Forty years after its popularisation as part of a call for global reform, is the Brandt Line now a misleading way of representing world politics? This article assesses whether the Global South has lost its distinctiveness and coherence relative to the North since 1980. Existing assessments of global inequality do not settle the question of whether the North–South divide remains relevant for international relations because they overlook the most politically significant measures of inequality. Drawing on power transition theory, this article provides a systematic assessment of the No...
Why are countries of the global north wealthier than countries of the global south? The economic gap...
The North–South divide can be conceived in several different ways and demar-cated along many differe...
Although Third World states lack military and economic strength, they still are able to exert consid...
An apparent \u27big switch\u27 in attitudes towards and discourse over economic globalisation has oc...
Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) scholarship contends that international law priv...
An apparent ‘big switch’ in attitudes towards and discourse over economic globalisation has occurred...
General inequality in development between global North and South is identified as a major source of ...
There is a large and persistent gulf between the living standards of the developed countries (North...
For decades we have been told a story about the divide between rich countries and poor countries. ...
This article examines the implications of the rise of new powers in the Global South for a central p...
Within the contemporary international order, deep structural inequalities coexist alongside a nomina...
The central argument of the paper is that the development contract that characterised North-South in...
The human-geographic regionalization is a landmark in the demarcation of territories that include po...
This article argues that the countries of the global South have defined themselves in a globally-pos...
Some major trends in world income inequalities and relevant economic trends are reviewed here. In re...
Why are countries of the global north wealthier than countries of the global south? The economic gap...
The North–South divide can be conceived in several different ways and demar-cated along many differe...
Although Third World states lack military and economic strength, they still are able to exert consid...
An apparent \u27big switch\u27 in attitudes towards and discourse over economic globalisation has oc...
Third World Approaches to International Law (TWAIL) scholarship contends that international law priv...
An apparent ‘big switch’ in attitudes towards and discourse over economic globalisation has occurred...
General inequality in development between global North and South is identified as a major source of ...
There is a large and persistent gulf between the living standards of the developed countries (North...
For decades we have been told a story about the divide between rich countries and poor countries. ...
This article examines the implications of the rise of new powers in the Global South for a central p...
Within the contemporary international order, deep structural inequalities coexist alongside a nomina...
The central argument of the paper is that the development contract that characterised North-South in...
The human-geographic regionalization is a landmark in the demarcation of territories that include po...
This article argues that the countries of the global South have defined themselves in a globally-pos...
Some major trends in world income inequalities and relevant economic trends are reviewed here. In re...
Why are countries of the global north wealthier than countries of the global south? The economic gap...
The North–South divide can be conceived in several different ways and demar-cated along many differe...
Although Third World states lack military and economic strength, they still are able to exert consid...