GRASP
Volume 4 | Issue 1 May 2020
Issue 1 | May 2017
A communication with government on UP’s collaboration with government, government entities, foreign missions and international, inter-governmental organisations
ALIGNING NATIONAL, CONTINENTAL AND GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT AGENDAS:
The role of the University’s SDG Hub The
South African SDG Hub, which was established at the University of Pretoria to support the implementation of the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), has published a Briefing Note on aligning the SDGs with African agendas, with a particular emphasis on their alignment with government’s National Development Plan (NDP). Supported by the Department of Science and Innovation, the SDG Hub is a national facility based in the Albert Luthuli Centre for Responsible Leadership on the Hatfield Campus, with Prof Willem Fourie as Coordinator. It aims to connect policy makers with the best South African research on the SDGs. Its focus is to enable access to relevant, useful and reliable knowledge resources, provide policy advice, promote dialogue and build capacity, thereby providing the blueprint to achieving a better future for all. It does this by collecting and disseminating open-access South African research on the SDGs through an open access platform.
The Briefing Note explores the alignment of national, continental and global development agendas. Titled Coordinating for impact: aligning Agenda 2063 and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development with the NDP’s cycle of development, it focuses on how South Africa’s NDP, the African Union’s Agenda 2063 and the global SDGs can be used together to improve people’s lives.
FIVE EMERGING LESSONS ARE IDENTIFIED IN THIS REPORT: • Significant SDG-NDP alignment on target level • The possibility of sequencing SDG implementation rather than identifying priorities • The interesting fact that SDG priorities are scattered across the NDP cycle of development • The enabling role of environmental sustainability • The cross-cutting importance of science, technology and innovation, and economic growth
Prof Willem Fourie, Coordinator of the South African SDG Hub
According to Prof Fourie, the Hub played a leading role in the drafting of South Africa’s first comprehensive SDG progress report, which was presented to the United Nations in September 2019. This report presented a mixed picture of South Africa’s progress. “The country is doing very well on some of the goals, notably the innovation components of SDG 9 (Industry, Innovation and Infrastructure). It has made some strides in attaining gender equity (SDG 5) and has even made some progress (admittedly from a low base) in promoting renewable energy (SDG 7). As far as SDG 3 (Good Health and Wellbeing) is concerned, it is seeing progress in the reduction of maternal and infant mortality rates, although it still has a long way to go. In some respects, however, notable economic growth and employment (SDG 8), it is not doing that well. At the presentation of the Briefing Note in October 2019, the University’s Vice-Chancellor and Principal, Prof Tawana Kupe, remarked: “We are very proud to work with our national government to provide this particular kind of service because universities are not entities in their own right. Universities belong to society. The only reason they should exist is to be transformative agents in society.” Prof Fourie concludes that it is gratifying to see the research being done through the SDG Hub translated into action through the provision of structured policy advice and the hosting of public lectures by renowned experts.
Towards a brighter future for all 1