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Mapping interactions between the sustainable development goals: lessons learned and ways forward
Authors:Måns Nilsson  Elinor Chisholm  David Griggs  Philippa Howden-Chapman  David McCollum  Peter Messerli  Barbara Neumann  Anne-Sophie Stevance  Martin Visbeck  Mark Stafford-Smith
Institution:1.Stockholm Environment Institute,Sweden and Royal Institute of Technology,Stockholm,Sweden;2.He Kainga Oranga/Housing and Health Research Programme, Department of Public Health,University of Otago,Wellington,New Zealand;3.Institute for Global Sustainable Development,University of Warwick,Coventry,UK;4.Monash Sustainable Development Institute,Monash University,Melbourne,Australia;5.Energy Program at the International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis (IIASA),Laxenburg,Austria;6.Centre for Development and Environment (CDE),University of Bern,Bern,Switzerland;7.Institute for Advanced Sustainability Studies (IASS),Potsdam,Germany;8.International Council for Science (ICSU),Paris,France;9.GEOMAR Helmholtz Centre for Ocean Research Kiel and Kiel University,Kiel,Germany;10.CSIRO Land and Water,Canberra,Australia
Abstract:Pursuing integrated research and decision-making to advance action on the sustainable development goals (SDGs) fundamentally depends on understanding interactions between the SDGs, both negative ones (“trade-offs”) and positive ones (“co-benefits”). This quest, triggered by the 2030 Agenda, has however pointed to a gap in current research and policy analysis regarding how to think systematically about interactions across the SDGs. This paper synthesizes experiences and insights from the application of a new conceptual framework for mapping and assessing SDG interactions using a defined typology and characterization approach. Drawing on results from a major international research study applied to the SDGs on health, energy and the ocean, it analyses how interactions depend on key factors such as geographical context, resource endowments, time horizon and governance. The paper discusses the future potential, barriers and opportunities for applying the approach in scientific research, in policy making and in bridging the two through a global SDG Interactions Knowledge Platform as a key mechanism for assembling, systematizing and aggregating knowledge on interactions.
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