#EDD19: Towns and regions reduce inequalities and leave no one and no place behindCet article est en cours de traduction. Merci pour votre patience.
rnThis article was initially published by PLATFORMA.
PLATFORMA, together with the 5 major local and regional government organisations – AIMF, CEMR, CLGF, UCLG and UCLG Africa – was actively participating at the 13th edition of the European Development Days (EDD), Europe’s leading forum on international development cooperation, which was held in Brussels on 18-19 June 2019.
rnThis edition of the forum addressed current successes and failures in addressing inequalities in the implementation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and the Global Development Agendas. For the third consecutive year, the Global Village City Hall stand attracted many visitors who had the opportunity to take pictures on the Photobooth with colorful 3D hashtags.
rnThis joint stand has proven to be once again a vibrant space to develop joint work among partner organisations. Work meetings and exchanges between members of the partner organisations and the visitors of the stand have allowed the co-creation of ideas and provided opportunities to further the notion of the localisation of the SDGs and the role that local and regional governments can play in achieving the global development agendas.
rnIn the various sessions, representatives from local and regional governments showcased how local and regional governments were already working to reduce inequalities through decentralised cooperation, through climate action, and through improving access to basic services and goods. The achievement of SDG 10 can only be done from the bottom-up, by tackling inequalities in urban planning.
The local and regional dimension of the SDGs, essential to leave no-one behind
rnThe 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development promotes decentralised cooperation to harmonise and strengthen progress towards more equitable territorial development. In a dialogue with representatives of national governments, cooperation agencies, and leaders of local government networks, Marlène Siméon, director of PLATFORMA, explained how decentralised cooperation should be addressed through the local sphere, and involve citizens in order to co-create the societies of the future. Participants from the Spanish Government and the Andalusian Agency for Development Cooperation reinstated the messages of the #SevilleCommitment, and the importance of an integrated territorial approach to achieve the SDGs.
rnIn another session, Marta Marin Sanchez, representative from the Basque Regional Government, Christopher Chishimba Kang’ombe, Mayor of Kitwe (Zambia), and Béchir Odeimi, President of Cités Unies Liban, also presented their innovative strategies to tackle territorial challenges, assessing the state of decentralization in their countries and the challenges and opportunities that local and regional governments are facing to achieve the SDGs. For his part Frédéric Vallier, Secretary General of CEMR, highlighted the essential need of multi-level territorial collaboration to truly ensure sustainable development.
rnCheck the pictures on our FlickR album
rnVisit eudevdays.eu
rnCheck #EDD19 and #LocalizingSDGs on Twitter
rn(Picture by UCLG)
Climate, Sustainable Finance Officer