Abstract

The sustainable development goals (SDGs) were adopted in 2015, succeeding the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). While the MDGs focused on improving well-being in the developing world, the 17 SDGs address all countries and aim at reconciling economic and social with ecological goals. We adopt a social ecology perspective and critically reflect on the SDGs’ potential for monitoring, supporting, and bringing about a transformation towards sustainability. Starting from a literature review on the SDGs, we link empirical findings from social ecology with analyses of SDG targets and indicators. First, we find that the SDGs fail to monitor absolute trends in resource use and thus prioritize economic growth over ecological integrity. Second, we discuss the contradictions between economic growth and sustainable resource use in early and late stages of industrialization processes and show that they are responsible for important trade-offs among SDG targets. Third, we analyze the transformative potential of the SDGs with a focus on the actors and institutions addressed to bring about transformative change. We find that the SDGs rely mainly on those institutions responsible for unsustainable resource use, and partly propose measures that even reinforce current trends towards less sustainability. Despite ascertaining limited transformative potential to the SDGs from an analytical perspective, we conclude by stressing the strategic relevance of the SDGs for visions, research, and practices of statt towards transformative change towards sustainability.

Highlights

  • Current global sustainability challenges such as climate change (IPCC 2018) or biodiversity loss (IPBES 2019) call for urgent action and lay grounds for international policyHandled by Jeremy Brooks, Ohio State University School of Environment and Natural Resources, United States.Institute of Social Ecology, Department of Economics and Social Sciences, University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences, Schottenfeldgasse 29, 1070 Vienna, AustriaMaster Program in Social and Human Ecology, Universitaet Klagenfurt, Universitätsstraße 65‐67, 9020 Klagenfurt, Austria initiatives

  • We investigated the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)’ effectiveness from a perspective of social ecology, which puts a strong focus on the links between societal transformation and biophysical interactions of society with the natural environment and their iterative co-evolution

  • Based on an analysis of targets and indicators, we identify a prioritization of economic growth over ecological integrity and a focus on efficiency improvements rather than absolute reductions in resource use

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Current global sustainability challenges such as climate change (IPCC 2018) or biodiversity loss (IPBES 2019) call for urgent action and lay grounds for international policyHandled by Jeremy Brooks, Ohio State University School of Environment and Natural Resources, United States.Master Program in Social and Human Ecology, Universitaet Klagenfurt, Universitätsstraße 65‐67, 9020 Klagenfurt, Austria initiatives. We critically investigate SDG targets and indicators against the recognition of the planetary boundaries as biophysical limits, and show that the SDGs put more focus on economic growth than on ecological integrity and fail to address an absolute reduction of resource use, both of which is in part due to a lack of theoretical foundation (Le Blanc 2015).

Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call