Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Sustainable Development
Topics

Science

Description

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development describes in paragraph 70 the composition and task of the Technology Facilitation Mechanism, established by the Addis Ababa Action Agenda and aimed at supporting the Sustainable Development Goals. More specifically, paragraph 70 of the 2030 Agenda reads: “the Technology Facilitation Mechanism will be based on a multi-stakeholder collaboration between Member States, civil society, private sector, scientific community, United Nations entities and other stakeholders and will be composed of: a United Nations Interagency Task Team on Science, Technology and Innovation for the SDGs, a collaborative Multistakeholder Forum on Science, Technology and Innovation for the SDGs and an on-line platform.”

Sustainable Development Goals Targets 17.6 and 17.8 respectively aim to “Enhance North-South, South-South and triangular regional and international cooperation on and access to science, technology and innovation and enhance knowledge sharing on mutually agreed terms, including through improved coordination among existing mechanisms, in particular at the United Nations level, and through a global technology facilitation mechanism“ and to “fully operationalize the technology bank and science, technology and innovation capacity-building mechanism for least developed countries by 2017 and enhance the use of enabling technology, in particular information and communications technology”.

Prior to the 2030 Agenda, the Rio+20 outcome document The Future We Want called for a Global Sustainable Development Report to bring together dispersed information and existing assessments, and to strengthen the science–policy interface at the High-level Political Forum on sustainable development (HLPF), through Paragraph 85.k.

As recalled by the Prototype Global Sustainable Report, published in 2014, the United Nations Secretary-General tasked, following Rio+20, the Division for Sustainable Development of the Department of Economic and Social Affairs to undertake “in-depth analysis and evaluation of trends and scientific analysis in the implementation of sustainable development, including lessons learned, best practices and new challenges, and cross-sectoral analysis of sustainable development issues”.

On that occasion, it was decided to produce a “prototype” report to facilitate dialogue between scientists and decision-makers and to establish for this purpose a United Nations system task team.

Decisions related to science were also taken by the World Summit on Sustainable Development held in 2002, by the Commission on Sustainable Development at its third (1995), fifth (1997) and sixth (1998) sessions and by the United Nations General Assembly at its Special Session to review the implementation of Agenda 21 (1997).

The Plan of Implementation adopted by WSSD underlined the importance of science-based decision-making, inter alia, by: integrating scientists' advice into decision-making bodies; partnerships between scientific, public and private institutions; improved collaboration between natural and social scientists, and establishing regular channels for requesting and receiving advice between scientists and policy makers; making greater use of integrated scientific assessments, risk assessments and interdisciplinary and intersectoral approaches; increasing the beneficial use of local and indigenous knowledge. Strengthening and creating centres for sustainable development in developing countries were encouraged, as well as networking with and between centres of scientific excellence and between science and education for sustainable development. Tools for science-based decision-making and sharing of knowledge and experiences to be promoted include: information and communication technologies, ground-based observations, satellite technologies, and national statistical services capable of providing sound data, assessment models, accurate databases and integrated information systems. The Plan also urged support for publicly funded research and development entities to engage in strategic alliances for the purpose of enhancing research and development.

The special session of the General Assembly held in June 1997 to review progress five years after UNCED stressed the need for authoritative scientific evidence for assessing environmental conditions and changes, which would facilitate international consensus-building. Scientific cooperation was to be promoted across disciplines for that purpose, and building scientific and technological capacity in developing countries was extremely important in that regard.

Science for sustainable development is the focus of Chapter 35 of Agenda 21. It calls for:

  • strengthening the scientific basis for sustainable management;
  • enhancing scientific understanding;
  • improving long-term scientific assessment; and
  • building up scientific capacity and capability.
Displaying 106 - 120 of 121
Title Type Date
Disaster Risk Governance: The essential linkage between DRR and SDGs Other documents 22-Jul-2015
Draft agenda for Expert Group Meeting on Science and Sustainable Development Goals Other documents 28-Feb-2013
Report on EGM for the GSDR: Emerging issues for the attention of policy makers Meeting reports 6-Apr-2016
Report on Expert group meeting for the GSDR: A systematic approach to science and technology issues for the… Meeting reports 2-Jun-2015
Meeting Report on Expert Group Meeting for the GSDR: Emerging issues and peer review Meeting reports 20-Oct-2015
Letter from ECOSOC to Member States on appointment of new co-chairs of the STI Forum in 2022 (28 October 2021) Letters 10-Nov-2021
Letter from the PGA - Invitation to the Briefing on the STI Forum 2018 Letters 23-Jan-2018
Flyer - Science, Technology and Innovation in Africa Day 2023 Flyer 3-Mar-2023
Expert Group Meeting on SDG 17: Thematic review Concept Notes 1-Feb-2019
Concept Note: Gender Equality in Science, Technology and Innovation: Driving Sustainable Future, 09 March… Concept Notes 18-May-2020
Concept note and Programme: Science, Technology and Innovation for the SDGs and recovery from Covid-19 Concept Notes 10-Jun-2020
Background Paper 21 - Scientific advisory processes Background papers/Special studies 20-Apr-1998
Background paper on EGM for the GSDR: Emerging issues for the attention of policy makers Background papers/Special studies 13-Apr-2016
UNDG People’s Voices Issue Brief to the SDG 6th Open Working Group Additional Resources 6-Dec-2013
Analysis of registered participants: Science, Technology and Innovation for the SDGs and recovery from… 10-Jun-2020
Displaying 106 - 120 of 183
Title Category Date
India Member States 22-Apr-2015
Latvia Member States 22-Apr-2015
Group of 77 and China Member States 22-Apr-2015
African Group Member States 22-Apr-2015
Alliance of Small Island States (AOSIS) Member States 22-Apr-2015
Bangladesh Member States 27-Apr-2015
Japan Member States 22-Apr-2015
Community of Latin American and Caribbean States (CELAC) Member States 22-Apr-2015
Brazil Member States 22-Apr-2015
Sri Lanka Member States 22-Apr-2015
Egypt Member States 22-Apr-2015
Indonesia Member States 22-Apr-2015
Paraguay Member States 22-Apr-2015
Philippines Member States 22-Apr-2015
United States of America Member States 22-Apr-2015