Abstract
Labeled by the UN as a holistic “plan of action for people, planet and prosperity,” the Agenda 2030 embraces 17 ambitious Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) pertaining, inter alia, to poverty eradication, climate change, health, education and peace, and strong institutions. Notwithstanding the progress the global community had reached toward the Goals by 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic caused an unprecedented disruption to the SDGs’ implementation. Against this background, this contribution presents a tertiary analysis of the SDGs and their implementation in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic’s implications, paying particular attention to challenges the pandemic has provoked in the domains of democratic governance and international cooperation (especially in light of Goal 16 “Peace, justice and strong institutions”). It is demonstrated that the COVID-19-induced challenges have to a considerable extent reinforced the trends, previously attributed in literature to the contestation(s) of international liberal order. Among such trends, scholars distinguish autocratization, deglobalization, the rise of nationalism and populism, and the geopoliticization of international relations. Reinforced by the pandemic, these trends definitely threaten to undermine the means of SDGs’ implementation (e.g., global trade, finance, and capacity-building) and the Global Partnership for Sustainable Development. It shall be, however, emphasized that the collective experience of countering the COVID-19 pandemic may still foster global cooperation via raising leaders’ awareness about the severity of global challenges and demanding new solutions in the environmental and health domains.
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Rabinovych, M. (2023). The Present and Future of Sustainable Development Goals amid the Transforming Global Order and Social Change. A Decade of Action. In: The Palgrave Handbook of Global Social Change. Palgrave Macmillan, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-87624-1_8-1
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