Sustainable Partnership: Security and the Post-2015 Development Goals

Sustainable Partnership: Security and the Post-2015 Development Goals
Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff and United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon at the closing ceremony of the Rio+20 U.N. Conference on Sustainable Development, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, June 22, 2012 (AP photo by Andre Penner).

In 2000, diplomats at the United Nations adopted eight development goals aimed at poverty reduction, education, nutrition, gender equality and safeguarding the environment in the world’s poorest countries. An impressive consortium of governments, multilateral organizations, philanthropic foundations, nongovernmental organizations and even celebrities answered the U.N.’s call to implement the so-called Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). In the past 15 years, partly due to the MDGs agenda, progress was made on a wide range of these development challenges: Extreme poverty was cut in half; deaths from malaria and tuberculosis were drastically reduced; millions of people gained access to anti-retroviral drugs to fight HIV/AIDS; and more boys and girls around the world were enrolled in school than ever before.

This year, the U.N. is developing the next iteration of global development goals, the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Initiating the process in 2012 during a global development summit in Rio de Janeiro, an Open Working Group was charged with devising a suggested set of goals to guide negotiations at the General Assembly prior to the forthcoming adoption of the SDGs in September 2015. The Open Working Group reported back to the U.N. last July, and negotiations are now underway.

There are interesting new dynamics in the SDGs that can be discerned from the current draft. Greater emphasis is placed on the role of security in achieving global development. This provides for an opportunity to engage defense and security actors more robustly and to form interesting and mutually beneficial partnerships across traditional divides.

Keep reading for free!

Get instant access to the rest of this article by submitting your email address below. You'll also get access to three articles of your choice each month and our free newsletter:

Or, Subscribe now to get full access.

Already a subscriber? Log in here .

What you’ll get with an All-Access subscription to World Politics Review:

A WPR subscription is like no other resource — it’s like having a personal curator and expert analyst of global affairs news. Subscribe now, and you’ll get:

  • Immediate and instant access to the full searchable library of tens of thousands of articles.
  • Daily articles with original analysis, written by leading topic experts, delivered to you every weekday.
  • Regular in-depth articles with deep dives into important issues and countries.
  • The Daily Review email, with our take on the day’s most important news, the latest WPR analysis, what’s on our radar, and more.
  • The Weekly Review email, with quick summaries of the week’s most important coverage, and what’s to come.
  • Completely ad-free reading.

And all of this is available to you when you subscribe today.

More World Politics Review