domingo, 20 de enero de 2019

V. Fernandez "Are the steps towards Agenda 2030 correct? New Hope?"


Víctor Fernández García

Are the steps towards Agenda 2030 correct? New Hope?

If we talk about development cooperation today, it is still considered a synonym for financial aid or official development assistance. However, development cooperation should maintain its focus on developing countries and internationally agreed concepts, building on the achievements of the global agenda.

In particular, development cooperation should fulfil three main tasks: to support and complement the efforts of developing countries aimed at facilitating social standards for their citizens, to promote the convergence of developing countries and, finally, to support the efforts of developing countries with a view to actively participating in the provision of international public goods.[1]

We can say that the two principles on which development theory is based are behind us. That is, the principle of difference: the developing world is a concrete reality (different from that of developed countries) that requires new categories of analysis; and the principle of similarity: with appropriate policies the developing world can converge with the developed world.

Now, instead of the North-South duality on which the principle of difference was based, countries are spread over a wider scale with different levels of development. And instead of convergence, we have to move to new patterns of development, because the world would be unsustainable if we tried to maintain the principle of convergence.[2]

In other words, the problem is not how to make developing countries become like developed countries, but how to make both groups of countries move, from different starting points, towards new sustainable models of development.


Source: UN

In order to tackle this problem, the new Agenda 2030 has emerged, which is made up of 17 interrelated objectives, ranging from local needs to national development challenges and also transnational challenges. It is not a minimum agenda as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were, but an ambitious and challenging agenda, which seeks to move countries towards sustainable development strategies.[3]

The UN agreement on Agenda 2030 opens a window of opportunity for countries to face the challenges of the present and move towards more sustainable development models. That there is an Agenda is no guarantee that everything can be done, the only thing it offers - and there is no small amount - is a tool for societies and their governments to set to work what was agreed in New York.[4]

For there to be sustained progress and change, it will be necessary to implement Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development in its joint form with the Addis Ababa Agenda for Action, the Paris Agreement on Climate Change, the 2015-2030 Sendái Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction and the New Urban Agenda.
Cooperation should continue to support developing countries with different agendas and context-specific programmes. In such a way that Agenda 2030 will help to reduce efforts, increase efficiency and strengthen the impact on development.

An example of how Agenda 2030 has worked is the support of African countries to integrate the goals and targets of Agenda 2030 and Agenda 2063 of the African Union into their national development frameworks. In January 2018, the approval of the African Union-United Nations Framework for the Implementation of Agenda 2063 and Agenda 2030 was reaffirmed to integrate, coordinate and monitor them.[5]

The adaptation of Agenda 2030 will require mutual accountability and transparency not between developing country governments and international development cooperation partners, but also to many other actors such as development banks, the private sector, civil society and others.[6]

Now, what role is Spain going to play? Spain has seen its image as a donor damaged and its weight on the multilateral scene diminished, as well as its capacity for dialogue with Latin America. Moreover, opportunities have been missed to broaden Spain's projection through its responsible involvement in the international development agenda.

For this reason, Spain must carry out a profound reform of the cooperation system, its institutional structure and the regulatory frameworks that condition its decisions in the area of international cooperation.[7]

Therefore, Agenda 2030 is a unique opportunity to put all countries to work in an effort to transform reality, to solve some of the most important challenges of the present and to seek sustainable strategies at the national and international levels.

And whether or not the Agenda becomes a reality will depend on the commitments made by governments and the pressure that societies exert to force those commitments to be fulfilled. The tools to activate the processes are already available, but now the task is for the international society and the policies of the countries.[8]

Finally, the second United Nations High-Level Conference on South-South Cooperation, to be held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in March, will give the international community the opportunity to review trends and assess progress to date in: promoting development, analysing experience in South-South cooperation and reaffirming Agenda 2030 for Sustainable Development.[9]
Source: UN


- South and the implementation of the 2030Agenda for Sustainable Development: Challenges and Opportunities, 2018.


2 comentarios:

  1. Victor, this is an interesting reflection but I am not sure why you think the MDGs were a minimalist agenda and the SDGs will transform reality much more. Please explain briefly. Thank you. Prof. Freres

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    Respuestas
    1. When I refer to the fact that the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) were minimalist, I mean that the international community wanted, at the start of the new century, to give new impetus to international cooperation efforts to put an end to extreme poverty, hunger, infant mortality or gender discrimination, as well as to provide primary education for the entire population, among other basic and necessary needs.
      It is true that the MDGs made an important contribution to ensuring an international consensus on an agenda with commitments and targets.
      While the international community can congratulate itself on some significant achievements in reducing poverty, hunger and access to education, it is also true that there were major gaps between countries and areas of action.
      A more ambitious and comprehensive approach, such as that adopted by Agenda 2030, is therefore necessary if the challenges of a more complex and interdependent world are to be met. V. Fndz.

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