Abstract

Achieving sustainable development globally requires multilevel and interdisciplinary efforts and perspectives. Global goals shape priorities and actions at multiple scales, creating cascading impacts realized at the local level through the direction of financial resources and implementation of programs intended to achieve progress towards these metrics. We explore ways to localize global goals to best support human well-being and environmental health by systematically comparing the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) with regionally-derived well-being dimensions that encompass components of social–ecological resilience across the Pacific Islands. Our research shows that, in the context of the Pacific, there are overlaps but also significant gaps between regional conceptions of well-being and the globally-derived SDGs. Some dimensions, related to human health and access to infrastructure and finances, are well represented in the SDGs. Other dimensions of high importance when localizing perspectives of well-being, such as those regarding connections between and across people and place and Indigenous and local knowledge, are not. Furthermore, internationally generated indicators may result in trade-offs and measurement challenges in local contexts. Creating space for place-based values in global sustainability planning aligns with international calls for transformational changes needed to achieve global goals. We identify challenges in applying SDG indicators at the local level and provide lessons learned to foster equitable and holistic approaches and outcomes for sustainability.

Highlights

  • The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted by the United Nations in 2015, presents a shared vision for a more prosperous, equitable, and environmentally sustainableHandled by Maria Tengo, Stockholms Universitet Stockholm Resilience Centre, Sweden.Electronic supplementary material The online version of this article contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.Extended author information available on the last page of the article world with no one left behind (United Nations 2015)

  • Our analyses examined whether the indicators are relevant and well-aligned with place-based decision-making needs in the Pacific; we eliminated from our analyses those indicators that are intended to be measured through comparisons at the national level only (e.g., Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 1.5.3 Number of countries that adopt and implement national disaster risk reduction strategies in line with the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015–2030)

  • Our analysis shows that some Well-being Dimensions are very well-represented in global metrics: all individual Factors within three Dimensions, Sustainability Management, Infrastructure/Finance, and Human Health, were linked to at least one SDG indicator

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Summary

Introduction

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, adopted by the United Nations in 2015, presents a shared vision for a more prosperous, equitable, and environmentally sustainable. Extended author information available on the last page of the article world with no one left behind (United Nations 2015). The underlying Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) are the result of a complex negotiation process (Kamau et al 2018; Dodds et al 2016) and encompass 17 broad and conceptually interlinked global goals, each with nested targets and indicators. The SDGs are presented as an indivisible whole, in practice there is little guidance regarding tradeoffs and synergies between and across the goals (Nilsson et al 2016; Singh et al 2018) or across levels of implementation (Jiménez‐Aceituno et al 2019). Implementation that ignores complex interactions within and across social–ecological systems risks increased potential for misdiagnosis and design of interventions with unintended and negative outcomes, including natural resource degradation, perverse incentives, displacement of communities, or loss of food

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