ACCELERATING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TOWARD 2030
Taken
together, the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) – contained in U.N.
Resolution 70/1 involving the 194 member states and civil society in its
deliberation – seek an encouraging level of development of humanity’s social
and environmental existence. They establish a framework through 2030 that can
assist nations and communities of the world in plotting what could amount to
transformative, prosperous, and sustainable achievements.
How
can this potential development unfold and be long-lasting? What approaches
should we catalyse so that sustainable projects result and generate the human
development benefits the world’s local publics want and need?
As
a starting point, most societies have internalized an enduring premise through
experiences, particularly since World War II, of social development and
reconstruction interventions: people accept and support decisions that they had
a part in making. We have learned this critical principle as we have analysed
human behaviour in our own and other cultures over centuries, and we find this
essential premise in texts of philosophy and spirituality of civilizations over
millennia. Indeed, this precept is no longer astounding, and is as true as
ever.
Plans
of development action that directly embody the spoken will of people naturally
gain their partnership, energy, and dedication. After all, decisions people
contribute to rendering, generally reflect the participants’ aspirations and
interests. Thus, people’s active participation in creating the projects that
fulfil the SDGs is ultimately the essential basis upon which the SDGs could
come into fruition, expand, and uplift our society and world. The
question then becomes: how do we set in motion across lands participatory
democratic meetings of local communities of people so that they identify,
prioritize, and implement sustainable development projects?
Morocco,
for example, has a progressive national municipal charter that is intended to
promote inclusive participation. Each municipality is required by law to create
multi-year community development plans driven by popular participation. If
nations of the world do not imbed in their national policies the essential
requirement of inclusion in the creation and determination of sustainable
development projects, how can we then expect to achieve SDGs when the public is
not encouraged to be involved in the determination and design of initiatives?
However,
we have also dishearteningly learned in Morocco’s case that laws and policies
are not enough for the fulfilment of widespread participatory development
actions. In fact, the example of Morocco, critically underscores that we must
also experientially learn methods (by applying them in reality) of community
democratic planning of projects in order for these processes to genuinely take
place. We must train our teachers, our youth and retirees, members of civil
society and the business community, locally elected officials, women and men,
those who have and those who have less, to not only participate in identifying
sustainable projects, but also facilitate the dialogue needed in order for all
people to come together, speak, argue, reconcile, and achieve consensus with
one another. Policies that promote participation coupled with learning by doing
is a needed combination that can lead to local community movements toward
accomplishing SDGs.
However,
even after codifying national policies and building capacities, these two
essential components are still not enough for the tangible realization of SDGs.
What would become of the designed participatory and sustainable projects
without finance to achieve implementation? Even when communities are in a
position to provide some work in-kind to help establish their development
projects, materials to construct must still be bought, seeds to plant must
still be purchased, capital must still be secured in order to enable
production.
Addressing
the distribution of public funds and obscene levels of inequality are
inevitable parts of the solution, but sitting on our hands until that illusive
day arrives is not an option, and not necessary. There are no pre-conditions to
sustainable development, other than people’s own desire and the freedom to
assemble.
In
Morocco, there is what could become a self-reliant pathway to generate the new
revenue needed in order to invest in projects that can achieve the economic,
health, environmental, and indirect political impacts of SDGs. The needed
finance can be generated by establishing the entire agricultural value chain,
from nurseries to market, including growing hundreds of millions of diverse
fruit trees that are indigenous to Morocco, such as almond, argan, avocado,
berries, carob, cherry, date, fig, jujube, lemon, olive, pomegranate, prickly
pear, walnut, and some apple varieties, as well as the more than two dozen
varieties of wild medicinal plants.
This
level and kind of planting and growing integrated with irrigation efficiency to
vastly expand yields, in further conjunction with certifying organic and
processing to markedly increasing income, and directing product toward both
domestic and global markets, can multiply by five the revenue generated by the
Moroccan agricultural economy. In Morocco, rural farming families, who
experience most of the nation’s poverty, still typically conduct subsistence
practices directed toward local traditional markets.
Greater
levels of agricultural income at least in Morocco’s case is vitally necessary
in order to secure the revenue needed to identify and achieve projects that
accomplish SDGs, this sector’s growth in itself being an SDG. Our experiences
in Burkina Faso and Cameroon, for example, also point to the same enormous
opportunity, where entirely naturally grown avocados, papayas, and mangos are
sold locally for a few cents each, where peanuts are bought and sold for
figurative peanuts, all the while industrialized nations of the world have
retail prices for these commodities 100 times what these growers receive.
Unless
we capitalize and optimize the most undervalued resources, human and
agricultural, how else may we derive the sorely needed finance in order to
carry through the sustainable development projects wanted by the publics? We
cannot wait for the justice of when there may finally be some semblance of
wealth equality, but in fact it is this very integrated process described that
will help achieve the income fairness, social decency, and sustainability that
accompanies it.
Participatory
movements driven by organic agricultural revenue inherently involve
multi-sectoral and multi-tiered partnerships, whereby local communities along
with government, civil, and business agencies collaborate in order to ignite
community planning and establish development plans and projects. These networks
of partnership also form decentralized arrangements or management channels of
an evolving system committed to sustainable development. This is to say that
decentralization is a by-product of pervasive participatory planning and the
implementation of community-identified projects. The kind of decentralization
that forms will naturally resemble the experience that gave it birth, which in
this proposed case is that of participatory governance.
In
Morocco, the kingdom has committed itself formally in 2008 and in its
constitution of 2011 to decentralized administration and inclusion of all
people, religions, and backgrounds in all rights and in the national
development imperative. The national commitment helps to create a society
conducive for encouraging bottom-up inclusive movements to achieve sustainable
projects, whereby civil organizations are founded and strengthened and in time
federate as they a work together – a course we have also seen in Morocco.
However, if a nation has not committed itself by its laws to decentralization
and federalism, but does enable community management of their development, they
still indirectly open a de facto pathway to a form of
decentralized organization, and potentially a systemic one over time.
This emerges from mounting and regularized inter-relationships involved in
community development, but also from the politicization of participants as they
internalize participatory procedures for governance and popular agendas for
change – and may thus opt to enter electoral politics.
In
sum, SDGs and their realization by 2030 will be a direct reflection of the
extent to which people participate in the change they seek. Their participation
will be a reflection of national policies that empower the sub-national and
programs of experiential training in facilitating participatory community
planning and development enacted in all parts of the land. That implementation
of locally identified projects is dependent upon committed revenue and that
requires, at least in Morocco and most developing nations, achieving the
potential of organic agriculture and the rewards it is presented by global
markets. Finally, by doing all of this and remaining true to the principles of
participation and public-private partnerships, decentralized arrangements and
federations for the management of development will emerge and institutionalize
a constant bottom-up energy. Increasingly flourishing on its own
successes, the model accelerates toward 2030 and to levels of sustainable
development for humanity and the planet, shining perhaps as never before.
Author: Dr. Yossef
Ben-Meir
Dr. Yossef Ben-Meir is president of the High Atlas
Foundation, a Moroccan-U.S. non-profit organization dedicated to
sustainable development and that since 2011 has Consultative Status at the
United Nations Economic and Social Council.
Credit: mediaforfreedom.com
ACCELERATING SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TOWARD 2030
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