Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

Sustainable development goals and inclusive development

842

Citations

38

References

2016

Year

TLDR

Sustainable development has been hindered by trade‑offs that prioritize economic growth over social well‑being and ecological viability, whereas inclusive development stresses the social, ecological, and political dimensions of progress. The study seeks to define inclusive development and assess its incorporation into the SDG framework. The authors operationalize inclusive development through three dimensions—social, ecological, relational—each with five principles, and map them onto the 17 SDGs and their targets. The analysis shows that SDGs perform well on social inclusiveness but poorly on ecological and relational inclusiveness, risking a social‑centric implementation, and stresses that equal weight to all three dimensions is essential for genuine inclusiveness in the Anthropocene.

Abstract

Achieving sustainable development has been hampered by trade-offs in favour of economic growth over social well-being and ecological viability, which may also affect the sustainable development goals (SDGs) adopted by the member states of the United Nations. In contrast, the concept of inclusive development emphasizes the social, ecological and political dimensions of development. In this context, this paper addresses the question: What does inclusive development mean and to what extent is it taken into account in the framing of the SDGs? It presents inclusive development as having three key dimensions (social, ecological, and relational inclusiveness) with five principles each. This is applied to the 17 SDGs and their targets. The paper concludes that while the text on the SDGs fares quite well on social inclusiveness, it fares less well in respect to ecological and relational inclusiveness. This implies that there is a risk that implementation processes also focus more on social inclusiveness rather than on ecological and relational inclusiveness. Moreover, in order to de facto achieve social inclusiveness in the Anthropocene, it is critical that the latter two are given equal weight in the actual implementation process.

References

YearCitations

Page 1