New Internationalist

COULD THE SDGS DELIVER ON THEIR PROMISES?

GARY: The SDGs cover a huge number of seemingly intractable issues. What might surprise many people is that there is a good chance they will succeed. There are six reasons to be optimistic. First, the fact that 191 countries actually agreed the SDGs is in itself somewhat astonishing. Anybody familiar with how international negotiations are conducted will testify to that.

Second, the SDGs are mobilizing all development organizations around the Goals. In the past, funds to support poverty reduction or other social or health objectives were more scattered and driven by the individual donors’ priorities.

Third, the role of the private sector is central to efforts to achieve the Goals – which was not the case in the past. Fourth, this is a time of massive technological innovation, when technology is speeding up and transforming the development process.

Fifth, generational change. Survey

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from New Internationalist

New Internationalist7 min read
Power In The Union
‘Alone our debts are a burden. Together they make us powerful.’ That’s the key message of the Debt Collective, a US-based debtors’ union, cofounded by Astra Taylor. With its roots in the Occupy movement, Debt Collective has brought together borrowers
New Internationalist3 min read
Mourn And Organize
The Emotional Experience of Political Defeat by Hannah Proctor (Verso, ISBN 9781839766053) versobooks.com ‘Don’t mourn: organize.’ This phrase, attributed to the American labour organizer Joe Hill, who was executed in 1915, sums up much of the Left’s
New Internationalist2 min read
Morocco Surf’s Up, Time’s Up.
In January, anonymous officials informed residents of the old town of Tasblast in southern Moroccan that they had 24 hours to pack and leave before their houses were demolished. Established in the 1980s by fishers, Tasblast was later discovered by su

Related Books & Audiobooks