Abstract

Policy Coherence for Development (PCD) is considered a pillar of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda. It aims to promote whole of government approaches to sustainable development. Despite its prominence in development cooperation discussions, many national development professionals or stakeholders have not heard of PCD, indicating that its effectiveness is significantly limited. This article contends that the impact of PCD has not been maximized because it has been presented as a political objective or a policy tool by multilateral organizations and their member states. Instead, the article argues that PCD should be implemented as a methodology that can be adopted by domestic government and non-governmental actors alike, in order to understand trade-offs and co-benefits within and between policy sectors, thus promoting a participative approach. I-GAMMA is a research project in Mexico that examines data-driven public policy in order to promote PCD. It is based on in-depth reviews of policy documents and interviews with development actors. It is committed to open data, evidence-based policymaking, and collaborative dialogue between academics, government officials, and representatives of civil society organizations in sustainable development discussions. In the results section of this article, the project proposes participative PCD as a methodology for policy analysis through which a plurality of actors can identify mechanisms that either reinforce or undermine sustainable development strategies. This section then applies the methodology to the governance of protected natural areas in Mexico. The discussion section and the conclusions highlight the relevance of this approach for participative policymaking in sustainable development.

Highlights

  • Policy Coherence for Development (PCD) is an instrument established by the global development cooperation community for the purpose of promoting development through international organizations and their member states

  • This approach examines the definition of sustainable development in Mexico’s development plans, which outline the country’s commitment to and operationalization of the Sustainable Development Goals

  • This section outlines the steps taken in I-GAMMA to operationalize PCD, and it applies them to the analysis of Protected Natural Areas (PNAs) governance in Mexico

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Summary

Introduction

Policy Coherence for Development (PCD) is an instrument established by the global development cooperation community for the purpose of promoting development through international organizations and their member states. It is a policy framework aimed at identifying interactions between different sectors that either undermine or reinforce development policy objectives. The context surrounding PCD has evolved [3,4] The establishment of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda has prioritized policy interactions as much as policy implementation in the field of development cooperation [5,6]. Its objectives in the context of the 2030 Agenda are to advance the integrated implementation of the 2030 Agenda by: (i) Fostering synergies and maximizing benefits across economic, social and environmental policy areas, (ii) balancing domestic policy objectives with internationally recognized sustainable development goals, and (iii) addressing the transboundary and long-term impacts of policies, including those likely to affect developing countries” [9]

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