Passar para o conteúdo principal

page search

Displaying 1021 - 1032 of 2473

Food and nutrition security in the SDGs – where are we heading?

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
Fevereiro, 2015
Global

The demand to eradicate extreme poverty and hunger has been the centrepiece of the Millennium Development Goals; the first MDG stands for the inextricable link between poverty and people’s ability to access safe, nutritious and sufficient food. How will the objective of achieving global food and nutrition security be embedded in the SDGs? Will the SDGs be a further step towards this target?

An ambitious post-2015 development agenda will depend on soils

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
Fevereiro, 2015
Global

The sustainable management of soils is crucial to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. This is evidenced by the analysis of the role soils play across the proposed agenda. However, some key aspects have not been sufficiently considered so far. Moreover, the SDGs will place increased demand on soils.

Monitoring progress on agriculture and rural development

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
Fevereiro, 2015
Global

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) will amount to little unless backed by reliable indicators. Only with good metrics can the agenda be implemented and progress measured. Just like the SDGs themselves, the indicators are still in the discussion phase, with the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) one of the many players in this process.

SDGs: Better process, worse outcome

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
Fevereiro, 2015
Global

Meant well doesn’t always mean done well. The Sustainable Development Goals are all set to undermine themselves, Stephan Klasen maintains. The worst aspect is that people, who really ought to be at the focus, threaten to fall by the wayside in this technocratic maze of hundreds of goals, targets, and indicators.

Nature as a commodity, or: Does nature have a value?

LandLibrary Resource
Journal Articles & Books
Fevereiro, 2015
Global

Is it right to attach financial values to nature and to incorporate that valuation into the post-2015 agenda? Will such valuation help to protect species diversity and ecosystems? Or does it not rather harbour the risk that we cheerfully go on destroying nature since other aspects of the national accounts can be seen as compensation? Civil society is split on this issue.