Translating Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interdependencies into Policy Advice
Abstract
:1. Introduction: The Integration Challenge
2. Literature Overview: Frameworks for the Conceptualization of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interlinkages and Interdependencies
2.1. Clustering SDGs According to Their Systemic Function
2.2. Towards the Exploration of SDG Interlinkages at the Target Level
2.3. Establishing a Priority Order for Policy Action in Implementing the SDGs
2.4. Applied Empirical Analysis of Synergies and Trade-Offs between the SDGs
- (1)
- In many cases, the negative nature of a relationship is the result of poor governance. The production of renewable energy (Target 7.2), for instance, can be associated with the infringement of rights (Target 1.4), when mega-projects for renewable energy are realized without consultation or compensation of the affected local communities. However, this negative interaction is not intrinsic to the production of renewable energy itself, but rather the result of inadequate governance.
- (2)
- Some relationships are generic across borders, while others are specific to a particular geographic context. The trade-off between bioenergy (Target 7.2) and food (SDG 2), for example, appears more prominently in the southern hemisphere than in northern European countries.
- (3)
- Some interactions develop in real time, while others show significant time lags. For example, increasing fertilizer use or harvesting remaining fish stocks can boost agricultural productivity (Target 2.4) and thereby food security (SDG 2) in the short term. However, these practices may have longer-term negative impacts on several SDGs, such as the conservation of oceans (SDG 14), and halting biodiversity loss (SDG 15).
- (4)
- In some cases, existing trade-offs could be significantly mediated or even eliminated by the development of suitable technology. The growth in personal mobility, for instance, at present conflicts with climate-change mitigation efforts. In the future, however, the transition to cars fueled by renewable electricity could mediate this trade-off.
- (5)
- Interaction between two SDGs or targets can have different directionalities. A unidirectional relationship means that objective A affects B, but B does not affect A. For example, electricity access (Target 7.1) is needed for powering clinics and delivering health care (Target 3.8), but health care is not needed for providing electricity access.
3. A Critical Discussion of Existing Frameworks and Mapping Approaches
3.1. Methodological Challenges
3.2. Context Sensitivity
3.3. Critical Ranking of Goals
3.4. Cross-Cutting Issues
4. Towards Integrated SDG Implementation: A Proposed Five-Step Roadmap for Co-Creation of Knowledge
- Step 1:
- Identify the problem situation and define an issue-based entry point (aspired output to achieve change for a specific SDG across policy sectors) and delineate the geographical reference points within which the output is to be achieved.
- Step 2:
- Identify i) the input needed; ii) the stakeholders involved and their interests; iii) external risks that may affect the output.
- Step 3:
- Analyze the scale of direct and indirect synergies and trade-offs between the aspired output and all other goals and targets.
- Step 4:
- Discuss the normative and ethical implications arising from the identified synergies and trade-offs.
- Step 5:
- Based on the four previous steps, develop policy recommendations for targeted improvements in the area under research, including recommendations regarding goal prioritization and recommendations regarding the institutional reforms needed to foster synergies and mediate trade-offs. Finally, extrapolate lessons regarding the potential for scaling-up of solutions for the area under research und their transformation into policy recommendations to be applied in other contexts. These five steps will create dynamics for each other and may require being pursued in an iterative and duplicative process in order to give justice to the complexity of interdependencies.
4.1. Setting the Scene
4.2. Analyzing the Interlinkages
4.3. From Understanding Interdependencies to Policy-Making
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Global | Global & National | National | |
---|---|---|---|
All SDGs | Niestroy 2016 / TWI 2050: Clustering SDGs according to main intended outcomes and systemic functions (goal level) Le Blanc 2015: Illustrating degrees of interconnectedness between the SDGs at target level Scott et al 2017: Establishing a priority order for implementing the SDGs (target level) | Pradhan et al. 2017: Providing a systematic, data-driven analysis of interactions between all SDG indicators (target level) | PwC-GMIS-UNIDO 2017: Distinguishing interaction types between all SDGs (target level) Weitz et al (2017): Understanding interaction types between SDG targets and mapping national level responsibilities for SDG implementation (target level) |
Selected SDGs as entry points | ICSU-ISSC 2017: Understanding interactions between selected SDGs (target level) | Simulation Models by TWI2050, WEFM, UNDPAD 2017: Forecasting global system dynamics over time (target level) | Collste et al. 2017: Forecasting national system dynamics over time (target level) |
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Breuer, A.; Janetschek, H.; Malerba, D. Translating Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interdependencies into Policy Advice. Sustainability 2019, 11, 2092. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11072092
Breuer A, Janetschek H, Malerba D. Translating Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interdependencies into Policy Advice. Sustainability. 2019; 11(7):2092. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11072092
Chicago/Turabian StyleBreuer, Anita, Hannah Janetschek, and Daniele Malerba. 2019. "Translating Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interdependencies into Policy Advice" Sustainability 11, no. 7: 2092. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11072092
APA StyleBreuer, A., Janetschek, H., & Malerba, D. (2019). Translating Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) Interdependencies into Policy Advice. Sustainability, 11(7), 2092. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11072092