Nigeria And The Sustainable Development Goals: Setting The Course To 2030
In September this year, under a relatively quiet banner, the Sustainable Development Goals (“SDGs”) were announced as part of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. Created to replace the expiring Millennium Development Goals (“MDGs”),
the SDGs build upon the tenets of its predecessor in addressing the
many cruel dimensions of poverty; combatting inequality and injustice
more holistically; and widening the breadth of the environmental targets
to tackle climate change.
Despite the positive development of the SDGs, the relatively muted
response to their announcement reinforces the fact that the MDGs largely
missed their mark. The MDGs succeeded in creating public discourse and
building a firm platform for organising international development
priorities around a set of unified objectives. However, they suffered
greatly from the “soft bigotry of low expectations”; being conceived and
executed exclusively by Western governments and organisations – who
then sought to socially engineer huge changes in developing countries
from the comfort of sky scrapers in New York. In retrospect, the MDGs
were doomed to fail from the moment it was decided to exclude emerging
markets from deciding on the goals and solutions for themselves.
As I am an advocate of emerging market autonomy and indigenous-led
development, I have been greatly encouraged by the SDGs, which are a
significant improvement on the MDGs in a number of ways. Firstly, this
long list of 17 goals (as opposed to the MDGs five), sub-goals, targets
and suggestions were derived from a global consultation with leadership
from developing countries. Secondly, and as a direct result of the first
point, there is a radical change in the discourse around development to
include a focus on global poverty, as opposed to just emerging market
poverty, seeking to identify causes and solutions for poverty across all
nations. Thirdly, the SDGs make it clear that the private sector will
be one of the main engines in achieving these goals as sustained
economic resilience requires private sector participation on a grand
scale. The result of this is a global data resource/guide and a menu of
targets that can be tailored by indigenous public and private sector
organisations, in each market, to suit their reality.
For the UN and other leading Western development organisations to
recognise at an institutional level that the indigenes of all countries
are both best placed to and entirely capable of setting their own goals
and targets, is a huge step forward. In fact, in this “SDG era”, Western
institutions and groups are partnering with local institutions and
individuals as a key strategy for achieving the goals.
This change also puts the responsibility for developing their
countries firmly back onto the shoulders of the citizens and governments
of those countries. This is as important psychologically as it is
politically and economically, particularly in regions like sub-Saharan
Africa. This responsibility comes at a time when many of these
countries, the most high profile example of which is Nigeria, are
becoming real democracies. Young democracies filled with people
empowered as much by the internet as by their own governments,
determined to exercise their power and transform their countries over
the next 15 years.
source: Forbes News

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