Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and case studies
- 1 SDG1 and the nature of poverty
- 2 Progress to 2015
- 3 The origins of SDG1
- 4 Progress since 2015
- 5 The impact of Covid-19
- 6 Tackling the root causes of poverty
- 7 Global governance and its limitations
- 8 Relying on “we the people”
- 9 Towards a moral world order
- 10 A postscript
- Glossary
- References
- Index
2 - Progress to 2015
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 January 2024
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures, tables and case studies
- 1 SDG1 and the nature of poverty
- 2 Progress to 2015
- 3 The origins of SDG1
- 4 Progress since 2015
- 5 The impact of Covid-19
- 6 Tackling the root causes of poverty
- 7 Global governance and its limitations
- 8 Relying on “we the people”
- 9 Towards a moral world order
- 10 A postscript
- Glossary
- References
- Index
Summary
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) did not simply replace the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), they were a reaction to them.
The eight Millennium Development Goals (Table 2.1), introduced with the signing of the Millennium Declaration at the United Nations headquarters in September 2000 were described by some as being “revolutionary” (SDGF 2022). Supported by the leaders of 189 countries, the goals seemed to offer “a common language to reach global agreement”. Not only were the goals generally considered to be realistic, but they also came with an approved mechanism for measurement and monitoring. Moreover, by 2015, the world seemed to be inching towards attaining several of the goals; it was even possible to claim that the goal of halving extreme poverty had been achieved five years ahead of schedule. For 15 years, therefore, the MDGs helped keep poverty and world development, if not in the public eye, at least as a focus for potential global collaboration.
However, by 2011, when the planning for the SDGs began in earnest, a large body of opinion considered that the MDGs were too narrowly focused and had therefore prevented poverty from being tackled in the round (UNEP 2012; Ivanova & Escobar-Pemberthy 2016). Some even suggested that the goals were fundamentally flawed ignoring the underlying causes of global poverty (Bello 2013; McCloskey 2015). The SDGs were therefore intended to take forward the collective energy inspired by the MDGs but to rectify at least some of their deficiencies. Hence, to understand the SDGs it is necessary to understand the MDGs.
The origins of the MDGs and the thinking behind them are considered before examining the extent to which they were truly successful. Viewed as an example of global international governance built around consensus, they stand as beacons of hope given previous failures. However, when the focus shifts to performance in relation to targets, and beyond to consider the impact on individual lives and the well-being of communities, the achievements begin to look more mundane, if not truly disappointing.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Poverty and the World OrderThe Mirage of SDG 1, pp. 19 - 40Publisher: Agenda PublishingPrint publication year: 2023