Normal view MARC view ISBD view

Sustainable development goals and good governance: The agenda for women empowerment

By: Deshmukh, Neelima.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: South Asian Journal of Socio-Political Studies Description: 23(1), Jul-Dec, 2022: p.70-72. In: South Asian Journal of Socio-Political StudiesSummary: The Millennium Declaration of United Nations (UN) set 2015 to provide quantitative benchmarks for 8 goals as, eradication of extreme poverty and hunger, Achieving universal Primary Education, promote gender equality and empowerment of women, educing Child Mortality rates, Improve maternal health, Combat HIV, malaria and other diseases, ensuring environment sustainability, global partnership for the Development etc. Bold and transformative agenda 2030 for the sustainable Development adopted by the world leaders at UN, also reaffirmed rationale for MSDGs to wipe out Poverty, Climate Change, Sustainable cities and Development, Gender equality, Fight inequality and emphasised their focus on Quality Education amongst the 17 measurable goals. The world is changing fast with the changing demands and needs of its population, their different kinds of requirements to cater and respond to the emerging situations and challenges are totally changed which has prioritized new agenda for the development of the country on the World canvass. The 2030 Agenda of SDGs is not about any individual country but the concentrated efforts of all the countries together creating the interlinked and globalised world, addressing the challenges of sustainable development from global to local, grass root level. To see the visible results all through it calls for tailor made strategies, policies, programmes, with their effective and successful implementation, maximizing the synergies, convergence and impacts, across the society. Therefore the good and smart governance is of crucial importance stressing upon the accountability, transparency, with the suitable regulatory mechanism needed to ensure human rights, equity, stability and long term sustainability, safeguarding against the corruption and exploitation of vulnerable deprived societies at the time of crises, along with the Institution building and the strengthening of governance capacity is the only way to respond to these challenges of 21st century. The effective coordination between different levels of policy and sectors at vertical and horizontal levels calls for the imperative to initiate action towards key governance issues like rule based, quality administration, management with transparency, accountability and anticorruption mechanisms, with the effective use of public resources added with the improved governance for the realisation of SDGs in letter and spirits.- Reproduced
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
    average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)
Item type Current location Call number Vol info Status Date due Barcode
Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
23(1), Jul-Dec, 2022: p.70-72 Available AR128361

The Millennium Declaration of United Nations (UN) set 2015 to provide quantitative benchmarks for 8 goals as, eradication of extreme poverty and hunger, Achieving universal Primary Education, promote gender equality and empowerment of women, educing Child Mortality rates, Improve maternal health, Combat HIV, malaria and other diseases, ensuring environment sustainability, global partnership for the Development etc. Bold and transformative agenda 2030 for the sustainable Development adopted by the world leaders at UN, also reaffirmed rationale for MSDGs to wipe out Poverty, Climate Change, Sustainable cities and Development, Gender equality, Fight inequality and emphasised their focus on Quality Education amongst the 17 measurable goals. The world is changing fast with the changing demands and needs of its population, their different kinds of requirements to cater and respond to the emerging situations and challenges are totally changed which has prioritized new agenda for the development of the country on the World canvass. The 2030 Agenda of SDGs is not about any individual country but the concentrated efforts of all the countries together creating the interlinked and globalised world, addressing the challenges of sustainable development from global to local, grass root level. To see the visible results all through it calls for tailor made strategies, policies, programmes, with their effective and successful implementation, maximizing the synergies, convergence and impacts, across the society. Therefore the good and smart governance is of crucial importance stressing upon the accountability, transparency, with the suitable regulatory mechanism needed to ensure human rights, equity, stability and long term sustainability, safeguarding against the corruption and exploitation of vulnerable deprived societies at the time of crises, along with the Institution building and the strengthening of governance capacity is the only way to respond to these challenges of 21st century. The effective coordination between different levels of policy and sectors at vertical and horizontal levels calls for the imperative to initiate action towards key governance issues like rule based, quality administration, management with transparency, accountability and anticorruption mechanisms, with the effective use of public resources added with the improved governance for the realisation of SDGs in letter and spirits.- Reproduced

There are no comments for this item.

Log in to your account to post a comment.

Powered by Koha