A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations

Recent scientific reports highlight the urgent need for transformations to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and long-term sustainability. This paper presents a new approach to partnerships that focuses on their role in transformations, the types of partnerships that may be needed and...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: David Horan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/18/4947
id doaj-44e029de4d66485fb8d8f990e4d9787b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-44e029de4d66485fb8d8f990e4d9787b2020-11-25T01:32:28ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502019-09-011118494710.3390/su11184947su11184947A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG TransformationsDavid Horan0School of Politics and International Relations, Centre for Sustainable Studies and the Geary Institute for Public Policy, University College Dublin, Dublin, IrelandRecent scientific reports highlight the urgent need for transformations to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and long-term sustainability. This paper presents a new approach to partnerships that focuses on their role in transformations, the types of partnerships that may be needed and their enabling environment. It introduces transformation effectiveness as a criterion to evaluate a portfolio of partnerships and pathways as a tool to frame discussion of required partnerships. Guided by energy decarbonization and using a simple model of partnership formation, I highlight a (potential) mismatch between the types of partnerships required for transformation and the partnership types arising under the currently dominant voluntary approach. The model suggests the bottom-up approach can deliver some, but not all, of the partnerships needed. Five specific problems are identified—compensation for losers, partnering capacity, short-time horizons, inadequate coordination mechanisms and misaligned incentives. The paper then outlines some policy tools—transfers, regulation, public investment—governments could use to strengthen the bottom-up framework and orchestrate missing partnerships. The conclusion addresses two problems specific to the transformation approach: how to identify more systematically the partnerships needed (identification problem) and how to implement them (implementation problem); and outlines some ways to deal with these—science, deliberation, international leadership coalitions and frameworks/monitoring systems for transition partnerships.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/18/4947sustainable developmentSDG transformationsmeans of implementationpartnershipsgovernancegovernments
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Horan
spellingShingle David Horan
A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations
Sustainability
sustainable development
SDG transformations
means of implementation
partnerships
governance
governments
author_facet David Horan
author_sort David Horan
title A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations
title_short A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations
title_full A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations
title_fullStr A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations
title_full_unstemmed A New Approach to Partnerships for SDG Transformations
title_sort new approach to partnerships for sdg transformations
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Recent scientific reports highlight the urgent need for transformations to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and long-term sustainability. This paper presents a new approach to partnerships that focuses on their role in transformations, the types of partnerships that may be needed and their enabling environment. It introduces transformation effectiveness as a criterion to evaluate a portfolio of partnerships and pathways as a tool to frame discussion of required partnerships. Guided by energy decarbonization and using a simple model of partnership formation, I highlight a (potential) mismatch between the types of partnerships required for transformation and the partnership types arising under the currently dominant voluntary approach. The model suggests the bottom-up approach can deliver some, but not all, of the partnerships needed. Five specific problems are identified—compensation for losers, partnering capacity, short-time horizons, inadequate coordination mechanisms and misaligned incentives. The paper then outlines some policy tools—transfers, regulation, public investment—governments could use to strengthen the bottom-up framework and orchestrate missing partnerships. The conclusion addresses two problems specific to the transformation approach: how to identify more systematically the partnerships needed (identification problem) and how to implement them (implementation problem); and outlines some ways to deal with these—science, deliberation, international leadership coalitions and frameworks/monitoring systems for transition partnerships.
topic sustainable development
SDG transformations
means of implementation
partnerships
governance
governments
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/11/18/4947
work_keys_str_mv AT davidhoran anewapproachtopartnershipsforsdgtransformations
AT davidhoran newapproachtopartnershipsforsdgtransformations
_version_ 1725081925858623488