Small Island Developing States

Small Island Developing States (SIDS) occupy a unique position in the context of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). They are often characterized by their vulnerability to environmental hazards, including climate change and natural disasters, and their economic challenges, such as limited resources and geographical isolation. However, these conditions also provide a unique opportunity for SIDS to lead by example in the transition towards sustainable and resilient societies.

The 17 SDGs, adopted by all United Nations Member States in 2015, have been recognized as a universal call to action to end poverty, protect the planet, and ensure that all people enjoy peace and prosperity by 2030. While the goals are applicable to all countries, SIDS face specific challenges and opportunities in achieving them. SIDS are inherently sustainable due to their dependence on local resources and the environment. Yet, they also have higher risks associated with climate change and environmental degradation, making Goals 13 (Climate Action), 14 (Life Below Water), and 15 (Life on Land) particularly relevant.

Climate change affects SIDS disproportionately due to their geography and economic structures. Rising sea levels, coral reef degradation, and increased frequency of extreme weather events pose significant threats to their survival and sustainability. SDG 13 calls for urgent action to combat climate change and its impacts, a mission deeply relevant to SIDS.

Similarly, as many SIDS rely heavily on marine resources, the health of the oceans is crucial. SDG 14 aims to conserve and sustainably use the oceans, seas and marine resources. For SIDS, overfishing, pollution, and acidification of oceans threaten not only their food security but also their economic sustainability.

On land, SIDS face unique challenges in sustainable management and efficient use of natural resources due to limited space and fragility of ecosystems. Thus, achieving SDG 15 (Life on Land) is crucial to SIDS’ resilience and sustainability.

In their pursuit of the SDGs, SIDS can act as global trailblazers. Given their vulnerability and reliance on natural resources, SIDS have the motivation and need to prioritize sustainable practices, making them potential role models for larger nations. It is crucial that the international community supports SIDS in their quest to reach the SDGs, and learns from their experiences, successes, and challenges along the way.

Elsevier, Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Volume 50, June 2021
Non-economic loss and damage induced by climate change in the Pacific Islands region has been reported as fears of cultural loss, deterioration of vital ecosystem services, and dislocation from ancestral lands, among others. This paper undertakes an in-depth systematic review of literature from the frontlines of the Pacific Islands to ascertain the complexities of non-economic loss and damage from climate change.
Elsevier,

Current Opinion in Environmental Sustainability, Volume 50, June 2021

Sea-level rise poses a significant threat to Small Island Developing States (SIDS) due to the concentration of people, assets, and infrastructure in coastal zones. This review assesses literature on key emerging topics in sea level rise including: the lasting impact of near-term mitigation on long-term sea-level rise; new global coastal vertical elevation data and their impact on existing sea-level rise projections; and the interaction of sea-level rise with other hazards, including salinization, tropical cyclones and extreme precipitation.

This book chapter advances SDGs 15 and 11 by looking at how island biogeography arose in the past and how it is now changing in the Anthropocene. Biogeography is determined by three processes: immigration, evolution, and extinction and in the Anthropocene, human impacts are increasingly more important to island biogeography.
This article contributes to a special issue examining SDG 14 and other international policy instruments for effective implementation of the Goal. This article focuses on island ocean states (IOS), or ‘small island developing states’ (SIDS), which are characterized by limited land and oceanic remoteness, creating local and international dependencies for food, livelihoods, trade and transport. While IOS contribute less than 1% to global green-house gases, they are directly impacted by extreme weather and climate change, in particular sea level rise.
Achieving the United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) results in many ecological, social, and economic consequences that are inter-related. Understanding relationships between sustainability goals and determining their interactions can help prioritize effective and efficient policy options. This paper presents a framework that integrates existing knowledge from literature and expert opinions to rapidly assess the relationships between one SDG goal and another.
Achieving the United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) results in many ecological, social, and economic consequences that are inter-related. Understanding relationships between sustainability goals and determining their interactions can help prioritize effective and efficient policy options. This paper presents a framework that integrates existing knowledge from literature and expert opinions to rapidly assess the relationships between one SDG goal and another.
Ethnopharmacological relevance In the Peruvian Amazon, the use of medicinal plants is a common practice. However, there is few documented information about the practical aspects of their use and few scientific validation. The starting point for this work was a set of interviews of people living in rural communities from the Peruvian Amazon about their uses of plants. Protozoan diseases are a public health issue in the Amazonian communities, who partly cope with it by using traditional remedies.
Photos of a beach on Henderson Island in the Pacific Ocean provides yet more evidence of the detrimental impact that packaging and other plastics waste is having on the environment globally. Creating a virtuous circle out of what, until now, has largely been a chain of production from feedstock to consumer will not be easy. But it is the innovation aspect that has fired the imagination of producers, processors and corporate consumers of plastics packaging. This fits with SDG 9.4 to upgrade infrastructure and retrofit industries to make them sustainable, with increased resource-use efficiency and greater adoption of clean and environmentally sound technologies and industrial processes and SDG 7 Affordable and Clean Energy.

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