Indicators

Indicators are essential tools that aid in the effective monitoring and evaluation of progress towards achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). These 17 goals, adopted by the United Nations in 2015, set forth an ambitious blueprint for global development by 2030, focusing on an array of areas such as eradicating poverty, achieving quality education, promoting gender equality, and ensuring environmental sustainability. Indicators play a critical role in translating these abstract aspirations into quantifiable, observable outcomes. Essentially, they function as markers that depict the current status of a specific SDG, allowing stakeholders to evaluate their strategies and actions and adjust as necessary.

For instance, the SDG 1, aiming to end poverty, utilizes indicators such as the proportion of a population living below the international poverty line or the proportion of men, women, and children of all ages living in poverty in all its dimensions. These indicators offer a clear and measurable way to track progress towards the objective. Similarly, the SDG 13, which targets actions to combat climate change and its impacts, employs indicators like the number of countries that have communicated the strengthening of their national adaptation plans or the number of countries that have integrated mitigation measures into their national policies.

Moreover, indicators are critical in fostering accountability and transparency. They provide a means for citizens, civil society organizations, and other stakeholders to hold governments accountable for their commitments towards achieving the SDGs. For example, if an indicator reveals slow or stagnant progress in a particular area, it signals the need for action, enabling the public to push for policy changes or interventions.

Indicators also encourage a data-driven approach to development. They offer objective evidence, thereby helping decision-makers to base their actions on facts rather than assumptions. Consequently, they contribute to the efficiency and effectiveness of interventions, promoting the optimal allocation of resources towards areas that require the most attention.

The relationship between indicators and SDGs is thus a dynamic and crucial one. Indicators serve not merely as measurement tools but as powerful agents of change, enabling the translation of the SDGs from broad global objectives into concrete, actionable, and measurable targets that can effectively guide the world towards sustainable development.

This paper explores physical, psychological, social, and institutional vulnerabilities associated with slow-onset events (SoEs) of climate change. Based on review of interdisciplinary research in the context of Pakistan, this paper reviews the relevance of multi-level vulnerabilities and how they exacerbate impacts of SoEs of climate change. The physical vulnerabilities of climate change have been relatively well researched; however, research on the psychological, social, and institutional vulnerabilities and their intersectional associations with SoEs have been rare.
This paper reviews the evidence on slow-onset events presented in the Special Report on Climate Change and Land (SRCCL) and the Special Report on the Ocean and Cryosphere in a Changing Climate (SROCC), both published in 2019. It analyses how the reports, and recent literature cited in them, deal with the eight types of slow-onset events, specified by the UNFCCC: increasing temperatures, sea level rise, salinization, ocean acidification, glacial retreat, land degradation, desertification and loss of biodiversity.
Elsevier, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Volume 50, June 2021
Slow onset events by definition occur gradually and it might be expected that policy-makers as a result pay less attention to them than to immediate risks or ‘shock’ crises. If this is true and what can be done about it are important issues for climate change policy-making, given the gradual nature of many climate related issues.
Elsevier, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Volume 50, June 2021
This article synthesizes recent empirical literature on human mobility linked to slow-onset impacts of climate change. Through a review of the CLIMIG database from 2015 to 2020, it assesses the state of knowledge on human mobility related to slow onset events by distilling peer-reviewed articles across world regions, with particular attention given to developing country contexts.
Elsevier,

Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Volume 50, June 2021

Climate change has affected diverse spheres and its impact is being witnessed worldwide. Soil, the basis of human sustenance, is both directly and indirectly affected by climate change. Soil erosion, vegetation degradation and soil salinisation are becoming prevalent, causing a threat to future food security. Saline soils are found mainly in North and Central Asia, Africa and South America. Various factors such as excess irrigation and poor drainage, groundwater salinity, sea level rise and intrusion, irregular rainfall contribute to the process of soil salinisation.

Nexis Newsdesk™ has created reports on the Sustainable Development Goals and the Global Media Landscape, offering charts & insights into global media coverage of the Global Goals.

Suffering has been a topic of considerable discussion in the fields of medicine and palliative care, yet few studies have reported causal evidence linking the experience of suffering to health and well-being. In this three-wave prospective cohort study, we explore the potential psychological implications of suffering during the COVID-19 pandemic by examining relations among suffering, mental health, and psychological well-being in a sample of U.S. adults living with chronic health conditions.
By mapping the state of research within each SDG area, this report acknowledges the pivotal role research plays in tackling some of the world’s greatest challenges. It aims to better understand the research community’s global sustainable development efforts and assesses the progress made, as well as unmet research needs.
RELX,

September 2020

Over the past five years, we have used data and analytics to help the research and healthcare  communities navigate the sea of research and to put collaboration, both interdisciplinary and international, at the heart of scientific progress on the SDGs. View findings for SDG 8.
RELX,

September 2020

Over the past five years, we have used data and analytics to help the research and healthcare  communities navigate the sea of research and to put collaboration, both interdisciplinary and international, at the heart of scientific progress on the SDGs. View findings for SDG 9.

Pages