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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs) contain a set of 17 measures
to foster sustainable development across many areas. It offers a good opportunity to
reinvigorate sustainable development research for two main reasons. First, it comprises
many areas of SD research, which have become mainstream thanks to the UN SDGs.
Second, the fact that the UN and its member countries have committed to attaining SDGs
by 2030 has added a sense of urgency to the need to perform quality research on SD on the
one hand, and reiterates the need to use the results of this research on the other. Even
though the basic concept of sustainability goes back many centuries, it has only recently
appeared on the international political agenda. This is partly due to an awakening of the fact
that the human ecological pressure on the planet is still much larger than what nature can
renew or compensate for. Based on this state of affairs, this paper presents an outline of the
process leading to the agreement on the UN SDGs, and looks at some of the ecological
aspects as a result of continued pressure of human activities on natural resources.
Furthermore, a set of research needs is proposed – also based holistically on updated
research trends – discussing the degree of urgency of some measures and explaining why
the UN SDGs need to be accorded greater priority in international sustainable development
research efforts.
Description
Keywords
Sustainable development goals Implementation UN 2030 Agenda Research International sustainable development