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The Environment in Global Sustainability Governance

作者
出版社
出版日期
2023/11/23
閱讀格式
EPUB
書籍分類
學科分類
ISBN
9781529228014

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Available Open Access digitally under CC-BY-NC-ND licence. With Agenda 2030, the UN adopted wide-ranging Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) that integrate development and environmental agendas. This book focuses on the political tensions between the environmental objectives and socio-economic aspects of sustainable development. The collection provides an introduction to interlinkages, synergies and trade-offs between the ‘green’ and other goals, such as gender equality and economic growth. It also considers related goals on cities and partnerships as crucial for implementing environmentally sound sustainability. Identifying governance failures and responsibilities, it advocates for a shift towards cooperative economics and politics for the common good.
  • Cover
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Figures, Tables and Boxes
  • List of Abbreviations
  • Notes on the Contributors
  • 1 Introduction: The Integration of Development and Environmental Agendas
    • 1.1 Prioritizing or balancing environmental protection?
    • 1.2 Environmental content of Agenda 2030
    • 1.3 Organization of this volume
    • Notes
    • References
  • Part I The Green Goals
    • 2 Governing the Climate Crisis: Three Challenges for SDG 13
      • 2.1 Governance challenges: tackling climate change internationally
      • 2.2 Responsibility challenges: unequally distributed emissions
      • 2.3 Political challenges: climate change deniers versus climate activists
      • 2.4 Three challenges for SDG 13
      • 2.5 Conclusion
      • Note
      • References
      • Interview with Miranda Schreurs and Jens Marquardt: Ending the North/South Divide in Climate Action
    • 3 Key Logics of International Forest Governance and SDG 15
      • 3.1 International forest governance: a chronological overview
      • 3.2 Three logics of international forest governance and its relations to SDG 15
      • 3.3 SDG 15 and the legacy of international forest governance
      • Acknowledgements
      • References
      • Interview with Daniela Kleinschmit: The Value of Nature
    • 4 Protecting Life below Water: Competing Normative, Economic and Epistemic Orders (SDG 14)
      • 4.1 Multilateral negotiations as order-making sites
      • 4.2 SDG 14: a narrow understanding of ocean governance
      • 4.3 The BBNJ case
      • 4.4 Alternative approaches for ocean sustainability
      • 4.5 Concluding remarks: beyond SDG 14
      • Acknowledgements
      • Note
      • References
      • Interview with Alice B.M. Vadrot: Ocean Governance: An Emerging Field for Political Science
    • 5 Sustainable Development and Water: Cross-sectoral, Transboundary and Multilevel Governance Arrangements in Bolivia, Ecuador and Switzerland
      • 5.1 The governance of water resources
      • 5.2 Illustrative case studies of subnational governance arrangements in mountain countries
      • 5.3 Discussion and conclusion
      • Notes
      • References
      • Interview with Manuel Fischer and Paúl Cisneros: A Conflict of Priorities, Not of Knowledge
  • Part II The Goals with Environmental Trade-offs and Synergies
    • 6 Water for Life and Food: Synergies between SDGs 2 and 6 and Human Rights
      • 6.1 The multiple framings of water
      • 6.2 Unpacking SDG 6
      • 6.3 The centrality of SDG 6 for multiple human well-being outcomes and ecosystem health
      • 6.4 Competing demands on water and the politics of scarcity
      • 6.5 Access to water as a sociopolitical construct
      • 6.6 The role of the private sector and growing corporate involvement in water management
      • 6.7 The right to water and synergies with the right to food
      • 6.8 Conclusion
      • Notes
      • References
      • Interview with Lyla Mehta and Claudia Ringler: Push Them, Name Them, and Shame Them
    • 7 SDG 2 and the Dominance of Food Security in the Global Agri-food Norm Cluster
      • 7.1 Norm clusters and global agri-food governance
      • 7.2 Historical norm development in global agri-food governance
      • 7.3 SDG 2: squaring the circle of the agri-food norm cluster
      • 7.4 Conclusion
      • References
      • Interview with Sandra Schwindenhammer: Partnering with the Enemy to Achieve SDG 2?
    • 8 Clean Energy Services: Universal Access as Enabler for Development?
      • 8.1 The energy for all challenge
      • 8.2 Renewable energy and electricity access: the case of Sub-Sharan Africa
      • 8.3 An eye on clean cooking
      • 8.4 Outlook
      • Notes
      • References
      • Interview with Nopenyo E. Dabla and Andreas C. Goldthau: The Disconnect Between Sustainability and Development
    • 9 From Economic Growth to Socio-ecological Transformation: Rethinking Visions of Economy and Work under SDG 8
      • 9.1 Problems with the pursuit of economic growth
      • 9.2 Problems with work in a growth-centric economy
      • 9.3 Reorienting economy and work towards socio-ecological transformation
      • 9.4 Conclusion
      • References
      • Interview with Ekaterina Chertkovskaya: Economic Growth Cannot Be the Answer
    • 10 ‘We Do Not Want to Be Mainstreamed into a Polluted Stream’: An Ecofeminist Critique of SDG 5
      • 10.1 What is a critical ecofeminist perspective?
      • 10.2 Centring gender equality in sustainable development debates
      • 10.3 What’s wrong with SDG 5?
      • 10.4 Gender-transformative sustainability? Ecofeminist pathways
      • 10.5 Conclusion: out of the polluted stream, paving the way towards the world we need
      • Notes
      • References
      • Interview with Sherilyn MacGregor and Aino Ursula Mäki: Environmental Policy Needs to Stop Being Indifferent to Difference
    • 11 Realizing Sustainable Consumption and Production
      • 11.1 SDG 12 and its targets
      • 11.2 Failure of neoliberal approaches to achieve SCP
      • 11.3 System changes for sustainable consumption and production
      • 11.4 Conclusion
      • References
      • Interview with Sylvia Lorek and Magnus Bengtsson: Contradictions between Economic Growth and Sustainable Consumption
  • Part III The Goals Relevant to an Environmentally Sound Implementation
    • 12 Cities and the SDGs: A Spotlight on Urban Settlements
      • 12.1 City networks as unifying agencies in global governance
      • 12.2 The rise of cities globally: a brief history of SDG 11
      • 12.3 Overview of SDG 11
      • 12.4 SDG 11 in action
      • 12.5 The story so far
      • 12.6 Conclusion
      • Note
      • References
      • Interview with Daniel Pejic: Cities and City Networks: Bottom-Up Pioneers in a Top-Down World
    • 13 Partnerships for SDGs: Facilitating a Biodiversity–Climate Nexus?
      • 13.1 The evolution of MSPs in the broader sustainable development agenda
      • 13.2 The biodiversity–climate nexus
      • 13.3 MSPs as nexus facilitators
      • 13.4 Analysing the biodiversity–climate governance landscape
      • 13.5 Conclusion
      • Notes
      • References
      • Interview with Philipp Pattberg: About Inclusive and Participatory Partnerships
    • 14 Synthesis: The Environment in Global Sustainability Governance
      • 14.1 Perception of the environment as a global commodity
      • 14.2 Actors and institutions in a fragmented and polycentric landscape
      • 14.3 Voluntary actions as governance alternatives
      • 14.4 Conclusion and outlook
      • References
  • Index
  • 出版地 英國
  • 語言 英文

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