Scoping article: Research frontiers on the governance of the Sustainable Development Goals

Open Access
Authors
  • T. Hickmann
  • F. Biermann
  • C.-A. Sénit
  • Y. Sun
  • M. Bexell
  • M. Bolton
  • B. Bornemann
  • J. Censoro
  • A. Charles
  • D. Coy
  • F. Dahlmann
  • M. Elder
  • F. Fritzsche
  • T. Gehre Galvão
  • J. Grainger-Brown
  • C. Inoue
  • K. Jönsson
  • M. Koloffon Rosas
  • K. Krellenberg
  • E. Moallemi
  • I. Lobos Alva
  • S. Malekpour
  • D. Ningrum
  • A. Paneva
  • L. Partzsch
  • R. Ramiro
  • R. Raven
  • E. Szedlacsek
  • J. Thompson
  • M. van Driel ORCID logo
  • J. Viani Damasceno
  • R. Webb
  • S. Weiland
Publication date 2024
Journal Global Sustainability
Volume | Issue number 7
Pages (from-to) 1-12
Number of pages 12
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
A recent meta-analysis on the political impact of the Sustainable
Development Goals (SDGs) has shown that these global goals are moving political processes forward only incrementally, with much variation across countries, sectors, and governance levels. Consequently, the realization of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development remains uncertain. Against this backdrop, this article explores where and how incremental political
changes are taking place due to the SDGs, and under what conditions these developments can bolster sustainability transformations up to 2030 and beyond. Our scoping review builds upon an online expert survey directed at the scholarly community of the ‘Earth System Governance Project’ and structured dialogues within the ‘Taskforce on the SDGs’ under this project. We identified five governance areas where some effects of the SDGs have been observable: (1) global governance, (2) national policy integration, (3) subnational initiatives,
(4) private governance, and (5) education and learning for sustainable
development. This article delves deeper into these governance areas and draws lessons to guide empirical research on the promises and pitfalls of accelerating SDG implementation
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1017/sus.2024.4
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