Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights.
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Superior document: | Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series ; v.5 |
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Place / Publishing House: | Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2019. ©2020. |
Year of Publication: | 2019 |
Edition: | 1st ed. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (246 pages) |
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Kaltenborn, Markus. Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. 1st ed. Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2019. ©2020. 1 online resource (246 pages) text txt rdacontent computer c rdamedia online resource cr rdacarrier Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series ; v.5 Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- About the Editors and Contributors -- Introduction -- References -- How Can a Human Rights-Based Approach Contribute to Poverty Reduction? The Relevance of Human Rights to Sustainable Developmen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Critique of the Neoliberal Agenda -- 3 The Universal Basic Income -- 4 Human Rights and Poverty in Local Contexts -- Poverty in Numbers and Processes of Change -- Equal Access to Services and Institutional Impediments -- Agency, Advocacy, and Voice -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The Human Rights Framework for Establishing Social Protection Floors and Achieving Universal Health Coverage -- 1 Introduction -- 2 General Comments No. 14 and 19 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights -- The Right to Health -- The Right to Social Security -- Progressive Realization, Core Obligations and International Assistance -- 3 International Political Initiatives to Improve the Implementation of the Right to Social Security and the Right to Health -- The ILO Social-Protection Floor-Recommendation and the Global Partnership for Universal Social Protection to Achieve the Susta... -- The International Health Partnership for UHC 2030 -- Proposal for a Framework Convention on Global Health -- 4 Social Protection Floors and Universal Health Coverage in the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda: Financial Responsibilitie... -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- People and Their Health Systems: The Right to Universal Health Coverage and the SDGs in Africa -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Health Rights Are a Challenge for Low Income Countries -- 3 Facilitators and Enablers for Mainstreaming Health Rights in Africa -- 4 How Can Africa Realize the Right to Health as Part of the SDGs? -- 5 Conclusion -- References. Freedom from Violence, Full Access to Resources, Equal Participation, and Empowerment: The Relevance of CEDAW for the Implemen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Womenś Equality and Womenś Empowerment in the 2030 Agenda -- 3 The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women -- A Globally Binding Standard -- Addressing the Root Causes of Discrimination -- A Blueprint for Comprehensive Action -- 4 Using CEDAW for Promoting Gender-Sensitive SDG Implementation -- Advantage CEDAW: Legally Binding Force -- Concluding Observations and Recommendations as Baselines and Targets -- 5 The Role of the CEDAW Committee in SDG Follow-Up and Review Processes -- 6 The Role of National Human Rights Institutions in SDG Implementation and Follow-Up -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- SDGs, Gender Equality and Womenś Empowerment: What Prospects for Delivery? -- 1 From MDGs to SDGs -- 2 Extent of Gender Inclusion -- 3 Accountability and Monitoring -- 4 Method of Implementation -- 5 Macroeconomic Framework -- 6 Role of the State and the Private Sector -- 7 Financing of SDGs -- 8 What Will a Transformative Approach Entail? -- Strengthening Accountability Mechanisms -- Use of Soft Law to Establish a Consensus -- Transforming the Economy to Achieve Gender Equality -- Increasing Investments in Gender Equality -- Engendering Climate Change with a View to Attaining Gender Equality and Sustainable Development -- Ensuring Full and Equal Participation of Women in Decision Making -- 9 Conclusion -- References -- Superfluous Workers: Why SDG 8 Will Remain Elusive -- 1 Widespread Vulnerable Employment -- 2 The Different Contexts of Early and Late Industrialization -- 3 The Democratic Challenge -- 4 Migration: The Narrow Safety Valve -- 5 The Productivity Gaps -- 6 Globalizationś Constraints -- 7 Limited State Capacity -- 8 Conclusion: Decent Work Remains Elusive. References -- Reducing Inequality Within and Among Countries: Realizing SDG 10-A Developmental Perspective -- 1 A Dedicated SDG on Reducing Inequality: The Relevance of SDG 10 -- 2 Scientific Research on Inequality: The Reason Behind SDG 10 -- The Social Dimension of Inequality -- The Economic Dimension of Inequality -- The Ecological Dimension of Inequality -- 3 The Genesis of SDG 10 -- 4 The Idea of International Solidarity: Nothing New in International Cooperation and Development Policy -- 5 SDG 10, A New Global Promise of Solidarity: Has It Had Any Legal Consequences? -- 6 Progress Reporting on SDG 10 -- 7 Germanyś Development Policy on SDG 10 -- 8 The Road Ahead -- References -- Securitizing Sustainable Development? The Coercive Sting in SDG 16 -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Evolving Rule of Law Concept: From Millennium Development Goals to the Sustainable Development Goals -- 3 The Rule of Law in International Practice 1993-2016 -- United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) -- United Nations Security Council (UNSC): Rule of Law Vacuums -- 4 The Rule of Law and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) -- 5 Conclusion: Securitizing Development? -- References -- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, and Human Rights -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2015 Paris Agreement -- 3 Human Rights and the Environment -- 4 Human Rights in the Paris Agreement -- 5 Is There Another View? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Books -- Book Chapters -- Journal Articles -- Reflecting on the Right to Development from the Perspective of Global Environmental Change and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Global Environmental Change and Human Development -- 3 What Follows from This for the Right to Development? Human Development Within the Limits of the Earthś Ecosystems -- References. The Role of Public and Private Actors and Means in Implementing the SDGs: Reclaiming the Public Policy Space for Sustainable D... -- 1 Re-defining the Global Partnership Agenda -- 2 Weakening the State: A Vicious Circle -- 3 Concentrated Power -- 4 Devastating Impacts -- 5 Counter-Movements and Breaking Ranks -- 6 What Has to Be Done? -- Strengthening Public Finance at All Levels -- Strengthening Public Policies Instead of Investors ́Rights -- Rethinking PPPs: Searching for Alternatives -- Creating Binding Rules on Business and Human Rights and UN-Business Interactions -- Dismantle Corporate Power and `Too Big to Fail ́Entities -- Changing the Mindset: Reclaiming the Public Space -- References -- Towards a Division of Labour for Sustainable Development: Extraterritorial Human Rights Obligations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development -- 3 International Human Rights Law -- The Right to Development -- Extraterritorial Obligations -- 4 Convergence and Added Value of Human Rights -- 5 Challenges Ahead for Human Rights Law -- Aspirational or Hard Legal Obligations? -- The Distributive Allocation of Obligations Remains Unsettled -- Triggers of Extraterritorial Fulfil Obligations Need to Be Defined More Clearly -- Scope of the Obligation to Cooperate for Development -- Sustainable Development and Growth Agnosticism -- 6 Conclusions -- References. Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources. Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. Electronic books. Krajewski, Markus. Kuhn, Heike. Print version: Kaltenborn, Markus Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019 9783030304683 ProQuest (Firm) Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=5987222 Click to View |
language |
English |
format |
eBook |
author |
Kaltenborn, Markus. |
spellingShingle |
Kaltenborn, Markus. Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series ; Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- About the Editors and Contributors -- Introduction -- References -- How Can a Human Rights-Based Approach Contribute to Poverty Reduction? The Relevance of Human Rights to Sustainable Developmen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Critique of the Neoliberal Agenda -- 3 The Universal Basic Income -- 4 Human Rights and Poverty in Local Contexts -- Poverty in Numbers and Processes of Change -- Equal Access to Services and Institutional Impediments -- Agency, Advocacy, and Voice -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The Human Rights Framework for Establishing Social Protection Floors and Achieving Universal Health Coverage -- 1 Introduction -- 2 General Comments No. 14 and 19 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights -- The Right to Health -- The Right to Social Security -- Progressive Realization, Core Obligations and International Assistance -- 3 International Political Initiatives to Improve the Implementation of the Right to Social Security and the Right to Health -- The ILO Social-Protection Floor-Recommendation and the Global Partnership for Universal Social Protection to Achieve the Susta... -- The International Health Partnership for UHC 2030 -- Proposal for a Framework Convention on Global Health -- 4 Social Protection Floors and Universal Health Coverage in the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda: Financial Responsibilitie... -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- People and Their Health Systems: The Right to Universal Health Coverage and the SDGs in Africa -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Health Rights Are a Challenge for Low Income Countries -- 3 Facilitators and Enablers for Mainstreaming Health Rights in Africa -- 4 How Can Africa Realize the Right to Health as Part of the SDGs? -- 5 Conclusion -- References. Freedom from Violence, Full Access to Resources, Equal Participation, and Empowerment: The Relevance of CEDAW for the Implemen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Womenś Equality and Womenś Empowerment in the 2030 Agenda -- 3 The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women -- A Globally Binding Standard -- Addressing the Root Causes of Discrimination -- A Blueprint for Comprehensive Action -- 4 Using CEDAW for Promoting Gender-Sensitive SDG Implementation -- Advantage CEDAW: Legally Binding Force -- Concluding Observations and Recommendations as Baselines and Targets -- 5 The Role of the CEDAW Committee in SDG Follow-Up and Review Processes -- 6 The Role of National Human Rights Institutions in SDG Implementation and Follow-Up -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- SDGs, Gender Equality and Womenś Empowerment: What Prospects for Delivery? -- 1 From MDGs to SDGs -- 2 Extent of Gender Inclusion -- 3 Accountability and Monitoring -- 4 Method of Implementation -- 5 Macroeconomic Framework -- 6 Role of the State and the Private Sector -- 7 Financing of SDGs -- 8 What Will a Transformative Approach Entail? -- Strengthening Accountability Mechanisms -- Use of Soft Law to Establish a Consensus -- Transforming the Economy to Achieve Gender Equality -- Increasing Investments in Gender Equality -- Engendering Climate Change with a View to Attaining Gender Equality and Sustainable Development -- Ensuring Full and Equal Participation of Women in Decision Making -- 9 Conclusion -- References -- Superfluous Workers: Why SDG 8 Will Remain Elusive -- 1 Widespread Vulnerable Employment -- 2 The Different Contexts of Early and Late Industrialization -- 3 The Democratic Challenge -- 4 Migration: The Narrow Safety Valve -- 5 The Productivity Gaps -- 6 Globalizationś Constraints -- 7 Limited State Capacity -- 8 Conclusion: Decent Work Remains Elusive. References -- Reducing Inequality Within and Among Countries: Realizing SDG 10-A Developmental Perspective -- 1 A Dedicated SDG on Reducing Inequality: The Relevance of SDG 10 -- 2 Scientific Research on Inequality: The Reason Behind SDG 10 -- The Social Dimension of Inequality -- The Economic Dimension of Inequality -- The Ecological Dimension of Inequality -- 3 The Genesis of SDG 10 -- 4 The Idea of International Solidarity: Nothing New in International Cooperation and Development Policy -- 5 SDG 10, A New Global Promise of Solidarity: Has It Had Any Legal Consequences? -- 6 Progress Reporting on SDG 10 -- 7 Germanyś Development Policy on SDG 10 -- 8 The Road Ahead -- References -- Securitizing Sustainable Development? The Coercive Sting in SDG 16 -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Evolving Rule of Law Concept: From Millennium Development Goals to the Sustainable Development Goals -- 3 The Rule of Law in International Practice 1993-2016 -- United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) -- United Nations Security Council (UNSC): Rule of Law Vacuums -- 4 The Rule of Law and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) -- 5 Conclusion: Securitizing Development? -- References -- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, and Human Rights -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2015 Paris Agreement -- 3 Human Rights and the Environment -- 4 Human Rights in the Paris Agreement -- 5 Is There Another View? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Books -- Book Chapters -- Journal Articles -- Reflecting on the Right to Development from the Perspective of Global Environmental Change and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Global Environmental Change and Human Development -- 3 What Follows from This for the Right to Development? Human Development Within the Limits of the Earthś Ecosystems -- References. The Role of Public and Private Actors and Means in Implementing the SDGs: Reclaiming the Public Policy Space for Sustainable D... -- 1 Re-defining the Global Partnership Agenda -- 2 Weakening the State: A Vicious Circle -- 3 Concentrated Power -- 4 Devastating Impacts -- 5 Counter-Movements and Breaking Ranks -- 6 What Has to Be Done? -- Strengthening Public Finance at All Levels -- Strengthening Public Policies Instead of Investors ́Rights -- Rethinking PPPs: Searching for Alternatives -- Creating Binding Rules on Business and Human Rights and UN-Business Interactions -- Dismantle Corporate Power and `Too Big to Fail ́Entities -- Changing the Mindset: Reclaiming the Public Space -- References -- Towards a Division of Labour for Sustainable Development: Extraterritorial Human Rights Obligations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development -- 3 International Human Rights Law -- The Right to Development -- Extraterritorial Obligations -- 4 Convergence and Added Value of Human Rights -- 5 Challenges Ahead for Human Rights Law -- Aspirational or Hard Legal Obligations? -- The Distributive Allocation of Obligations Remains Unsettled -- Triggers of Extraterritorial Fulfil Obligations Need to Be Defined More Clearly -- Scope of the Obligation to Cooperate for Development -- Sustainable Development and Growth Agnosticism -- 6 Conclusions -- References. |
author_facet |
Kaltenborn, Markus. Krajewski, Markus. Kuhn, Heike. |
author_variant |
m k mk |
author2 |
Krajewski, Markus. Kuhn, Heike. |
author2_variant |
m k mk h k hk |
author2_role |
TeilnehmendeR TeilnehmendeR |
author_sort |
Kaltenborn, Markus. |
title |
Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. |
title_full |
Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. |
title_fullStr |
Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. |
title_full_unstemmed |
Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. |
title_auth |
Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. |
title_new |
Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights. |
title_sort |
sustainable development goals and human rights. |
series |
Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series ; |
series2 |
Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series ; |
publisher |
Springer International Publishing AG, |
publishDate |
2019 |
physical |
1 online resource (246 pages) |
edition |
1st ed. |
contents |
Intro -- Preface -- Contents -- About the Editors and Contributors -- Introduction -- References -- How Can a Human Rights-Based Approach Contribute to Poverty Reduction? The Relevance of Human Rights to Sustainable Developmen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Critique of the Neoliberal Agenda -- 3 The Universal Basic Income -- 4 Human Rights and Poverty in Local Contexts -- Poverty in Numbers and Processes of Change -- Equal Access to Services and Institutional Impediments -- Agency, Advocacy, and Voice -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The Human Rights Framework for Establishing Social Protection Floors and Achieving Universal Health Coverage -- 1 Introduction -- 2 General Comments No. 14 and 19 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights -- The Right to Health -- The Right to Social Security -- Progressive Realization, Core Obligations and International Assistance -- 3 International Political Initiatives to Improve the Implementation of the Right to Social Security and the Right to Health -- The ILO Social-Protection Floor-Recommendation and the Global Partnership for Universal Social Protection to Achieve the Susta... -- The International Health Partnership for UHC 2030 -- Proposal for a Framework Convention on Global Health -- 4 Social Protection Floors and Universal Health Coverage in the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda: Financial Responsibilitie... -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- People and Their Health Systems: The Right to Universal Health Coverage and the SDGs in Africa -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Health Rights Are a Challenge for Low Income Countries -- 3 Facilitators and Enablers for Mainstreaming Health Rights in Africa -- 4 How Can Africa Realize the Right to Health as Part of the SDGs? -- 5 Conclusion -- References. Freedom from Violence, Full Access to Resources, Equal Participation, and Empowerment: The Relevance of CEDAW for the Implemen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Womenś Equality and Womenś Empowerment in the 2030 Agenda -- 3 The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women -- A Globally Binding Standard -- Addressing the Root Causes of Discrimination -- A Blueprint for Comprehensive Action -- 4 Using CEDAW for Promoting Gender-Sensitive SDG Implementation -- Advantage CEDAW: Legally Binding Force -- Concluding Observations and Recommendations as Baselines and Targets -- 5 The Role of the CEDAW Committee in SDG Follow-Up and Review Processes -- 6 The Role of National Human Rights Institutions in SDG Implementation and Follow-Up -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- SDGs, Gender Equality and Womenś Empowerment: What Prospects for Delivery? -- 1 From MDGs to SDGs -- 2 Extent of Gender Inclusion -- 3 Accountability and Monitoring -- 4 Method of Implementation -- 5 Macroeconomic Framework -- 6 Role of the State and the Private Sector -- 7 Financing of SDGs -- 8 What Will a Transformative Approach Entail? -- Strengthening Accountability Mechanisms -- Use of Soft Law to Establish a Consensus -- Transforming the Economy to Achieve Gender Equality -- Increasing Investments in Gender Equality -- Engendering Climate Change with a View to Attaining Gender Equality and Sustainable Development -- Ensuring Full and Equal Participation of Women in Decision Making -- 9 Conclusion -- References -- Superfluous Workers: Why SDG 8 Will Remain Elusive -- 1 Widespread Vulnerable Employment -- 2 The Different Contexts of Early and Late Industrialization -- 3 The Democratic Challenge -- 4 Migration: The Narrow Safety Valve -- 5 The Productivity Gaps -- 6 Globalizationś Constraints -- 7 Limited State Capacity -- 8 Conclusion: Decent Work Remains Elusive. References -- Reducing Inequality Within and Among Countries: Realizing SDG 10-A Developmental Perspective -- 1 A Dedicated SDG on Reducing Inequality: The Relevance of SDG 10 -- 2 Scientific Research on Inequality: The Reason Behind SDG 10 -- The Social Dimension of Inequality -- The Economic Dimension of Inequality -- The Ecological Dimension of Inequality -- 3 The Genesis of SDG 10 -- 4 The Idea of International Solidarity: Nothing New in International Cooperation and Development Policy -- 5 SDG 10, A New Global Promise of Solidarity: Has It Had Any Legal Consequences? -- 6 Progress Reporting on SDG 10 -- 7 Germanyś Development Policy on SDG 10 -- 8 The Road Ahead -- References -- Securitizing Sustainable Development? The Coercive Sting in SDG 16 -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Evolving Rule of Law Concept: From Millennium Development Goals to the Sustainable Development Goals -- 3 The Rule of Law in International Practice 1993-2016 -- United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) -- United Nations Security Council (UNSC): Rule of Law Vacuums -- 4 The Rule of Law and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) -- 5 Conclusion: Securitizing Development? -- References -- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, and Human Rights -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2015 Paris Agreement -- 3 Human Rights and the Environment -- 4 Human Rights in the Paris Agreement -- 5 Is There Another View? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Books -- Book Chapters -- Journal Articles -- Reflecting on the Right to Development from the Perspective of Global Environmental Change and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Global Environmental Change and Human Development -- 3 What Follows from This for the Right to Development? Human Development Within the Limits of the Earthś Ecosystems -- References. The Role of Public and Private Actors and Means in Implementing the SDGs: Reclaiming the Public Policy Space for Sustainable D... -- 1 Re-defining the Global Partnership Agenda -- 2 Weakening the State: A Vicious Circle -- 3 Concentrated Power -- 4 Devastating Impacts -- 5 Counter-Movements and Breaking Ranks -- 6 What Has to Be Done? -- Strengthening Public Finance at All Levels -- Strengthening Public Policies Instead of Investors ́Rights -- Rethinking PPPs: Searching for Alternatives -- Creating Binding Rules on Business and Human Rights and UN-Business Interactions -- Dismantle Corporate Power and `Too Big to Fail ́Entities -- Changing the Mindset: Reclaiming the Public Space -- References -- Towards a Division of Labour for Sustainable Development: Extraterritorial Human Rights Obligations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development -- 3 International Human Rights Law -- The Right to Development -- Extraterritorial Obligations -- 4 Convergence and Added Value of Human Rights -- 5 Challenges Ahead for Human Rights Law -- Aspirational or Hard Legal Obligations? -- The Distributive Allocation of Obligations Remains Unsettled -- Triggers of Extraterritorial Fulfil Obligations Need to Be Defined More Clearly -- Scope of the Obligation to Cooperate for Development -- Sustainable Development and Growth Agnosticism -- 6 Conclusions -- References. |
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The Relevance of Human Rights to Sustainable Developmen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Critique of the Neoliberal Agenda -- 3 The Universal Basic Income -- 4 Human Rights and Poverty in Local Contexts -- Poverty in Numbers and Processes of Change -- Equal Access to Services and Institutional Impediments -- Agency, Advocacy, and Voice -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- The Human Rights Framework for Establishing Social Protection Floors and Achieving Universal Health Coverage -- 1 Introduction -- 2 General Comments No. 14 and 19 of the Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights -- The Right to Health -- The Right to Social Security -- Progressive Realization, Core Obligations and International Assistance -- 3 International Political Initiatives to Improve the Implementation of the Right to Social Security and the Right to Health -- The ILO Social-Protection Floor-Recommendation and the Global Partnership for Universal Social Protection to Achieve the Susta... -- The International Health Partnership for UHC 2030 -- Proposal for a Framework Convention on Global Health -- 4 Social Protection Floors and Universal Health Coverage in the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda: Financial Responsibilitie... -- 5 Conclusion -- References -- People and Their Health Systems: The Right to Universal Health Coverage and the SDGs in Africa -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Health Rights Are a Challenge for Low Income Countries -- 3 Facilitators and Enablers for Mainstreaming Health Rights in Africa -- 4 How Can Africa Realize the Right to Health as Part of the SDGs? -- 5 Conclusion -- References.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Freedom from Violence, Full Access to Resources, Equal Participation, and Empowerment: The Relevance of CEDAW for the Implemen... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Womenś Equality and Womenś Empowerment in the 2030 Agenda -- 3 The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women -- A Globally Binding Standard -- Addressing the Root Causes of Discrimination -- A Blueprint for Comprehensive Action -- 4 Using CEDAW for Promoting Gender-Sensitive SDG Implementation -- Advantage CEDAW: Legally Binding Force -- Concluding Observations and Recommendations as Baselines and Targets -- 5 The Role of the CEDAW Committee in SDG Follow-Up and Review Processes -- 6 The Role of National Human Rights Institutions in SDG Implementation and Follow-Up -- 7 Conclusion -- References -- SDGs, Gender Equality and Womenś Empowerment: What Prospects for Delivery? -- 1 From MDGs to SDGs -- 2 Extent of Gender Inclusion -- 3 Accountability and Monitoring -- 4 Method of Implementation -- 5 Macroeconomic Framework -- 6 Role of the State and the Private Sector -- 7 Financing of SDGs -- 8 What Will a Transformative Approach Entail? -- Strengthening Accountability Mechanisms -- Use of Soft Law to Establish a Consensus -- Transforming the Economy to Achieve Gender Equality -- Increasing Investments in Gender Equality -- Engendering Climate Change with a View to Attaining Gender Equality and Sustainable Development -- Ensuring Full and Equal Participation of Women in Decision Making -- 9 Conclusion -- References -- Superfluous Workers: Why SDG 8 Will Remain Elusive -- 1 Widespread Vulnerable Employment -- 2 The Different Contexts of Early and Late Industrialization -- 3 The Democratic Challenge -- 4 Migration: The Narrow Safety Valve -- 5 The Productivity Gaps -- 6 Globalizationś Constraints -- 7 Limited State Capacity -- 8 Conclusion: Decent Work Remains Elusive.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">References -- Reducing Inequality Within and Among Countries: Realizing SDG 10-A Developmental Perspective -- 1 A Dedicated SDG on Reducing Inequality: The Relevance of SDG 10 -- 2 Scientific Research on Inequality: The Reason Behind SDG 10 -- The Social Dimension of Inequality -- The Economic Dimension of Inequality -- The Ecological Dimension of Inequality -- 3 The Genesis of SDG 10 -- 4 The Idea of International Solidarity: Nothing New in International Cooperation and Development Policy -- 5 SDG 10, A New Global Promise of Solidarity: Has It Had Any Legal Consequences? -- 6 Progress Reporting on SDG 10 -- 7 Germanyś Development Policy on SDG 10 -- 8 The Road Ahead -- References -- Securitizing Sustainable Development? The Coercive Sting in SDG 16 -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The Evolving Rule of Law Concept: From Millennium Development Goals to the Sustainable Development Goals -- 3 The Rule of Law in International Practice 1993-2016 -- United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) -- United Nations Security Council (UNSC): Rule of Law Vacuums -- 4 The Rule of Law and the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) -- 5 Conclusion: Securitizing Development? -- References -- Climate Change, Sustainable Development, and Human Rights -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2015 Paris Agreement -- 3 Human Rights and the Environment -- 4 Human Rights in the Paris Agreement -- 5 Is There Another View? -- 6 Conclusions -- References -- Books -- Book Chapters -- Journal Articles -- Reflecting on the Right to Development from the Perspective of Global Environmental Change and the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable... -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Global Environmental Change and Human Development -- 3 What Follows from This for the Right to Development? Human Development Within the Limits of the Earthś Ecosystems -- References.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="505" ind1="8" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">The Role of Public and Private Actors and Means in Implementing the SDGs: Reclaiming the Public Policy Space for Sustainable D... -- 1 Re-defining the Global Partnership Agenda -- 2 Weakening the State: A Vicious Circle -- 3 Concentrated Power -- 4 Devastating Impacts -- 5 Counter-Movements and Breaking Ranks -- 6 What Has to Be Done? -- Strengthening Public Finance at All Levels -- Strengthening Public Policies Instead of Investors ́Rights -- Rethinking PPPs: Searching for Alternatives -- Creating Binding Rules on Business and Human Rights and UN-Business Interactions -- Dismantle Corporate Power and `Too Big to Fail ́Entities -- Changing the Mindset: Reclaiming the Public Space -- References -- Towards a Division of Labour for Sustainable Development: Extraterritorial Human Rights Obligations -- 1 Introduction -- 2 The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development -- 3 International Human Rights Law -- The Right to Development -- Extraterritorial Obligations -- 4 Convergence and Added Value of Human Rights -- 5 Challenges Ahead for Human Rights Law -- Aspirational or Hard Legal Obligations? -- The Distributive Allocation of Obligations Remains Unsettled -- Triggers of Extraterritorial Fulfil Obligations Need to Be Defined More Clearly -- Scope of the Obligation to Cooperate for Development -- Sustainable Development and Growth Agnosticism -- 6 Conclusions -- References.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="588" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="590" ind1=" " ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries. </subfield></datafield><datafield tag="655" ind1=" " ind2="4"><subfield code="a">Electronic books.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="700" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Krajewski, Markus.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="700" ind1="1" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">Kuhn, Heike.</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="776" ind1="0" ind2="8"><subfield code="i">Print version:</subfield><subfield code="a">Kaltenborn, Markus</subfield><subfield code="t">Sustainable Development Goals and Human Rights</subfield><subfield code="d">Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2019</subfield><subfield code="z">9783030304683</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="797" ind1="2" ind2=" "><subfield code="a">ProQuest (Firm)</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="830" ind1=" " ind2="0"><subfield code="a">Interdisciplinary Studies in Human Rights Series</subfield></datafield><datafield tag="856" ind1="4" ind2="0"><subfield code="u">https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/oeawat/detail.action?docID=5987222</subfield><subfield code="z">Click to View</subfield></datafield></record></collection> |