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Evidence-based policy to localise the Sdgs

date November 6, 2024 | 11:00 - 12:30
place
SDGs in Action - room C
organization
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)
country
France
language
English
Reference: 
SDG-C 7

Summary

The effective implementation of a territorial approach to the SDGs implies the combined use of a variety of tools. These span from a solid multi-level governance system, to global and context-specific data for evidence-based policies and actions, combining functional and administrative approaches to address territorial challenges and opportunities. Implementing evidence-based policies is key to localise the SDGs and will be focus of this event.
The event will build on the conviction that cities, regions and national governments need evidence regarding their “distance” to the SDGs, notably since at least 105 of the 169 SDGs targets will not be achieved without the engagement and coordination with local and regional governments. At least 80% of OECD regions have not achieved the 2030 targets in any of the 17 SDGs, and at least 70% of cities have not fulfilled the suggested objectives for 15 out of the 17 SDGs. Knowing where they stand and what challenges they still have to address, can help local governments to redefine priorities, strategies, budgeting, and redirect action towards the achievement of the SDGs. In view of the increasing number of cities and regions using the SDGs to shape their local development plans and strategies, there is a strong a demand for subnational indicators to assess policies and strategies. Regions and cities require a more adapted and context-specific indicator framework to monitor progress towards all the SDGs.
This was one of the key reasons, why the OECD developed a framework to localise the SDG targets and indicators in regions and cities. The framework, which was first published in 2020, includes a method to measure the distance of regions and cities to each of the 17 SDGs, trying to maximise international comparisons. To respond to the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, Russia’s war of aggression against Ukraine and expand the evidence-base, this webtool has been updated and further developed to include the most recent data of more than 600 cities and regions in OECD countries and beyond, which will be presented during the event. A new OECD Municipal and Local Data Platform also helps to measure progress at administrative level.
Based on the new evidence, this event also aims to facilitate the sharing of best practices and innovative strategies among cities, regions and international organisations for integrating SDG-focused indicators into local policy making, enhancing the ability to monitor and accelerate progress towards the 2030 Agenda. It will build on the expertise of panelists from international organisations including the OECD, UN-Habitat, European Commission JRC, cities (e.g. Los Angeles) and national governments (e.g. Brazil) and provide a platform for stakeholders to discuss the development and implementation of context-specific metrics help design evidence-based policies with the goal to achieve the SDGs.

Objectives

• Illustrate how evidence-based policy and measurement frameworks can help cities, regions and national governments localise the SDGs
• Provide successful examples of evidence-based policy-making for sustainable development by gathering representatives from the OECD, UN-Habitat, European Commission JRC, cities (e.g. Los Angeles) and national governments (e.g. Brazil).
• Leverage the findings from the OECD programme on A Territorial Approach to the SDGs, along with the other organisations' workstreams on localising the SDGs
• Launch two new and updated OECD tools to further support national and subnational governance in using granular data for SDGs policy-making. These are the new version of the OECD webtool on measuring cities’ and regions’ distance to the SDGs, which was first launched at the World Urban Forum 2020 in Dubai, and the OECD Municipal and Local Data Platform.
• Showcase new crucial data to stakeholders at all levels to create new partnerships, linking data analysis with practical measures to meet the 2030 Agenda targets

Session speakers

Speaker
Role
Organization
Country
Ms. Lamia Kamal-Chaoui
Director
OECD
Mr. Jader Barbalho Filho
Minister of Cities, Brazil
Ministry of Cities Brazil
Mr. Michal Mlynár
Acting Executive Director of UN-Habitat
UN Habitat
Ms. Erin Bromaghim
Deputy Mayor, city of Los Angeles
City of Los Angeles
Mr. Iraklis Stamos
Project Lead, SDGs Localisation
European Commission Joint Research Centre