Agenda 2030 spain pdf
17.2 Ensure that developed countries fully comply with their official development assistance commitments, including allocating 0.7% of gross national income to official development assistance for developing countries.
17.4 Assist developing countries in achieving long-term debt sustainability through coordinated policies aimed at promoting debt financing, debt relief, debt restructuring, and addressing external debt.
17.7 Promote the development, transfer, dissemination and diffusion of environmentally sound technologies to developing countries on concessional terms, including on concessional and preferential terms, by mutual agreement.
17.8 Make fully operational, by 2017, the technology bank and the science, technology and innovation support mechanism for least developed countries and increase the use of enabling technology, in particular information and communications technology.
Agenda 2030 Goals
The Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) guided the work of the United Nations from 2000 to 2015. That is why the member countries of the United Nations took on the task, starting at the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development – Rio+20 – in 2012, of initiating the process of defining the development agenda that would guide the work of the entire United Nations system from 2016 until 2030. In 2015 and after 8 rounds of intergovernmental negotiations with input from a wide variety of actors, the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development was born, which includes the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This agenda was adopted by the 70th General Assembly during the 2015 Sustainable Development Summit, which took place from September 25 to 27, 2015 in New York.
This new development agenda is proposed as a roadmap for countries to move towards achieving sustainable development, putting people at the center, under a rights-based approach in the framework of a renewed universal partnership. This new future proposal was built on the experiences gathered from the implementation of the United Nations post-2015 development agenda, resulting in a more ambitious and complex agreement that includes a vision, principles, an implementation strategy and a global review framework, which aims to have a universal and holistic agenda for the achievement of sustainable development.
What is the objective of the 2030 agenda?
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, unanimously adopted at the United Nations by heads of state and government in September 2015, is very ambitious. If taken seriously, it has the potential to change the prevailing development paradigm, emphasizing the multidimensional and interrelated nature of sustainable development and its universal applicability.
The 2030 Agenda offers an opportunity to correct the errors and omissions of the “Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) approach,” an approach that has narrowed the development discourse and focused on the symptoms of extreme poverty and the provision of basic social services in poor countries. While these problems are undoubtedly extremely important, the MDG approach did not adequately take into account the structural flaws of the global economic and financial systems, the imperative of ecological sustainability and the responsibilities of the global North.
Ods Spanish
The United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, which revolves around the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), reflects the aspirations of millions of people around the globe for the world they want. Civil society, major groups and other stakeholders, in an unprecedented show of engagement and dynamism, provided concrete input into the intergovernmental process that culminated in the adoption of the 2030 Agenda by Heads of State and Government in September 2015. The 2030 Agenda is an Agenda “of the people, by the people and for the people” and is intended to be implemented with the collaboration of “all countries, all stakeholders and all people.”
The publication Stakeholder engagement in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. A practical guide, whose content results from the adaptation and updating of the online course “Strengthening stakeholder engagement in the implementation and review of the 2030 Agenda”, developed by UN DESA and UNITAR, includes essential information about collaborative approaches to the implementation of the SDGs and offers concrete tools and methods to address them. It was delivered from 2016 to 2019 as a semi-facilitated course for nearly 300 government representatives from around the world, with the aim of strengthening their capacity to engage stakeholders in the implementation of the 2030 Agenda.