Thinking Beyond Sectors for Sustainable Development
Contributor(s)
Waage, Jeff (editor)
Yap, Christopher (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
"This book brings together a series of working papers, produced by interdisciplinary groups of academics within the project, on progress made under the Millennium Development Goals and introduces current debates surrounding the Sustainable Development Goals and the post-2015 agenda. Originating from an interdisciplinary, multi-institution research collaboration, Thinking Beyond Sectors for Sustainable Development, funded by UCL Grand Challenges. The project brought together over thirty academics from UCL, SOAS, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, Birkbeck, Institute of Education, and the Royal Veterinary College, and was coordinated by the London International Development Centre (LIDC). The book explores potential interactions between sustainable development goals in the post-2015 development agenda.
Introduced and edited by Prof Jeff Waage (LIDC) and Christopher Yap (LIDC), chapters are dedicated to the topics of Biodiversity and Ecosystems, Human Health, Urban Poverty, Climate and Climate Change, Population Growth, Food and Agriculture, Information, Education and Knowledge, and Governance. Each chapter reflects on the three principle questions of 1) What is the historical process by which goal setting in this sector has developed?, 2) What progress has been achieved with this sector through MDGs and other processes? and 3) What is the current debate about future goal setting?"
Keywords
interdisciplinarity; governance; public policy; international development; sustainable development goals (sdgs); post-2015; Millennium Development Goals; Reproductive health; United NationsDOI
10.5334/baoISBN
9781909188433;9781909188440;9781909188457OCN
936351863Publisher
Ubiquity PressPublisher website
https://www.ubiquitypress.com/Publication date and place
2015Grantor
Classification
Political structure and processes
Central / national / federal government policies
Development economics and emerging economies
Social impact of environmental issues