The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg ConferenceThe Johannesburg Earth Summit, which took place in the summer of 2002, confirmed the irreversible nature of the process that is founded upon the concept of Sustainable Development initially given form at Rio de Janeiro ten years earlier. This process is to be welcomed, while at the same time recognising the tremendous work that has taken place in converting this concept into a more concrete vision. The Sustainable Development concept relates to every human activity, covering the social, economic and ecological dimensions, which are often in conflict. Consequently, it is most important to include in research programmes some thought of the way people behave. In theory, the general elements of this inclusion are relatively easily defined. However, assessing the effects of one or another decision on all the interactions between the social, economic and ecological dimensions involves significant difficulties. All the more since we have to recognise, in all modesty, that humanity has not always excelled in the art of forward studies. In fact, the Precautionary Principle was introduced partly as a reaction to the sometimes blind confidence in technology and logic (even if it is sometimes invoked in an exaggerated manner). Nevertheless, the duty to act for the sake of present and future generations is pressing. Throughout history mankind has had to adapt and to innovate. Now, at st the beginning of the 21 century the urgent need for such adaptations is obvious. |
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Contents
THE JOHANNESBURG CONFERENCE | 1 |
1 Introduction | 2 |
2 The context and the antecedents | 5 |
22 Implementation of the Rio agreements | 6 |
23 The Millennium Declaration | 8 |
25 The Monterrey Consensus | 11 |
26 The Summit Preparatory Committees PrepComs | 12 |
3 World Summit on Sustainable Development | 14 |
33 Water | 217 |
4 General problems | 218 |
5 Regional Environmental Centre | 219 |
6 The EU and the CEE countries | 220 |
7 Conclusions | 221 |
WSSD 2002 LATIN AMERICA AND BRAZIL BIODIVERSITY AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLE | 223 |
1 Introduction | 224 |
2 The diversity of life forms | 226 |
32 The Johannesburg Declaration on Sustainable Development | 15 |
33 Plan of Implementation of the WSSD | 16 |
34 Type II partnerships for Sustainable Development | 26 |
4 Discussion | 28 |
42 Evaluation of WSSD outcomes | 31 |
5 Conclusion | 32 |
References | 33 |
POVERTY REDUCTION AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 35 |
2 From Rio to Johannesburg | 36 |
22 Strategies for poverty alleviation | 37 |
23 Agenda 21 and the Johannesburg Plan of Implementation | 39 |
3 Poverty sustainability and growth | 43 |
31 Growth and the Environment | 44 |
32 Naturalising development thinking | 47 |
4 The way forward | 50 |
41 Clarifying the conceptual framework | 51 |
43 Aiming at policy coherence | 52 |
References | 53 |
CHAPTER 3 PRODUCTION CONSUMPTION AND THE WORLD SUMMIT ON SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 57 |
2 Production and consumption at Rio | 58 |
22 Common but differentiated responsibilities | 60 |
24 Reviewing progress | 61 |
More actionoriented? | 63 |
33 Consumer guidelines on sustainable consumption | 66 |
The implementation gap | 67 |
4 Production consumption and the WSSD Plan of Implementation | 76 |
42 Towards a tenyear programme of work | 77 |
43 Corporate responsibility and accountability | 79 |
44 Cleaner production and ecoefficiency | 80 |
45 Other proposed actions | 81 |
46 Role of trade and investment | 83 |
5 Conclusions | 84 |
References | 86 |
WATER FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN AFRICA | 91 |
2 The African water vision | 92 |
3 The African water task force | 94 |
5 The African crisis | 96 |
7 Salient features of water resources in Africa | 98 |
72 Extreme spatial and temporal variability of climate and rainfall | 100 |
74 Inadequate institutional and financing arrangements | 101 |
75 Inadequate data and human capacity | 102 |
78 Water pollution and environmental degradation | 103 |
9 What did the WSSD achieve? | 104 |
91 Access and availability | 106 |
92 Allocation issues | 107 |
94 Social issues | 108 |
11 Conclusion | 110 |
References | 111 |
ENERGY AND SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AT GLOBAL ENVIRONMENTAL SUMMITS AN EVOLVING AGENDA | 113 |
conceptual connections | 114 |
21 Energy and environmental stress | 115 |
22 Energy and economic growth | 116 |
23 Energy and basic human needs | 118 |
3 Global policy on energy and sustainable development | 120 |
31 Stockholm 1972 | 121 |
32 Rio de Janeiro 1992 | 123 |
33 Johannesburg 2002 | 126 |
34 An evolving agenda | 129 |
4 Conclusions | 131 |
MANAGEMENT OF CHEMICALS FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 135 |
1 Introduction | 136 |
Agenda 21 and postRio actions | 137 |
3 Rotterdam Convention | 140 |
4 Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants | 141 |
5 Bahia declaration and priorities for action beyond 2000 | 143 |
6 Globally Harmonised System GHS for the classification and labelling of chemicals | 145 |
8 Conclusions | 147 |
References | 148 |
HEALTH A NECESSITY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT | 151 |
2 Health | 152 |
3 Disease and Ill Health | 154 |
4 Disease and population changes | 159 |
5 Changing behaviour | 163 |
6 Vulnerable groups | 165 |
7 Economics | 168 |
8 Education | 171 |
9 Beliefs and values | 173 |
10 Westernisation | 174 |
11 Traffic air quality and chemicals | 176 |
12 Conclusions | 179 |
References | 180 |
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN SMALL ISLAND DEVELOPING STATES THE CASE OF THE MALDIVES | 183 |
1 Introduction | 184 |
2 Vulnerability and small islands | 186 |
21 Demography | 187 |
3 Maldives a typical small island developing state | 189 |
31 Demography | 191 |
32 Socioeconomic status | 192 |
33 Freshwater | 193 |
34 Energy | 194 |
35 Pollution | 195 |
36 Biodiversity | 196 |
37 Climate change and sealevel rise | 197 |
38 Implications of climate change to sustainable development | 200 |
4 Progress in implementation and future prospects | 203 |
5 Conclusion | 206 |
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT A NEW CHALLENGE FOR THE COUNTRIES IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE | 211 |
2 Conferences of the European Ministers for environment | 213 |
23 The Third Ministerial Conference Sofia 1995 | 214 |
3 The state of the environment in the region | 215 |
32 Soil | 216 |
environmental demographic and socioeconomic diversity | 230 |
4 The Amazonian dilemma | 231 |
5 Indigenous peoples and sustainability | 233 |
6 Conclusions | 235 |
Acknowledgements | 236 |
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND THE ROLE OF THE FINANCIAL WORLD | 241 |
1 Johannesburg and its means of implementation | 242 |
2 Official development assistance and the development banks | 243 |
3 Open and equitable multilateral trading and financial systems | 244 |
31 Problems regarding short term financial security | 245 |
4 Foreign direct investments | 246 |
42 FDI versus ODA | 247 |
5 Microfinance | 248 |
7 Sustainable bankers and insurers pushing the codes | 249 |
8 A survey on the stateoftheart sustainability and banking | 252 |
81 The London Principles | 253 |
82 WBSCD Joint Statement at Johannesburg Summit | 254 |
9 Environmental care CSR and accountability | 255 |
92 The frameworks of EMAS ISO VFU EPI and ABI | 258 |
101 Success in the market | 259 |
102 Performance | 260 |
103 Mainstreaming and convergence | 261 |
104 Engagement | 262 |
105 The carbon disclosure project | 264 |
global objectives local divergences | 265 |
12 The impetus of the European definition on CSR | 267 |
121 Triple bottom line approach | 268 |
124 Having a dialogue with stakeholders | 269 |
132 No harmonisation of the evaluation and rating process | 270 |
References | 271 |
EDUCATION FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT THE JOHANNESBURG SUMMIT AND BEYOND | 275 |
2 Means of implementation of the JPI and some parallel initiatives | 276 |
22 The Ubuntu Declaration | 277 |
23 Some other initiatives on education for sustainable development | 278 |
can science and technology deliver sustainable development? | 280 |
32 Causeeffect relationship | 282 |
33 Can science and technology deliver sustainable development? | 283 |
4 Evolution of human attitude to the environment | 285 |
42 In Western civilisations | 286 |
5 Heuristic for a solution | 289 |
52 Methodology | 291 |
6 Conclusion | 295 |
References | 297 |
SCIENCE RESEARCH KNOWLEDGE AND CAPACITY BUILDING | 299 |
what does a fair world mean in respect to finite environmental resources? | 300 |
2 Which grand challenges do earths societies face? | 301 |
3 Was the WSSD in Johannesburg a science summit? | 303 |
4 What is on the science agenda before and after Johannesburg? | 305 |
5 How many dimensions does capacity building have? | 307 |
6 What about best practice examples in capacity building? | 308 |
7 How to communicate the scientific value of sustainability? | 310 |
scientists with hearts and new ideas all over the world | 311 |
what does the new contract between science and the public look like? | 313 |
References | 316 |
GOVERNANCE FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT AND CIVIL SOCIETY PARTICIPATION | 319 |
2 The concept of governance | 320 |
3 Good governance | 322 |
4 The role of civil society | 324 |
5 Participation | 325 |
51 Types of participation | 327 |
6 Link between governance and participation | 328 |
7 Governance and democratisation | 329 |
9 Treatment of governance at the World Summit | 330 |
92 A chapter on governance or on institutional framework? | 331 |
93 The vital role of partnerships | 333 |
94 Principles of good governance | 334 |
10 Treatment of participation at the World Summit | 335 |
11 Post WSSD | 339 |
Need for a World Environment Organisation? | 340 |
112 The role of Civil Society in the future sustainability debate | 341 |
12 Conclusion | 342 |
References | 343 |
PARTNERSHIPS | 347 |
2 Partnerships | 348 |
21 Partnerships for sustainable development | 349 |
23 Process of forming a partnership for sustainable development | 353 |
24 Key features of successful multistakeholder partnerships | 355 |
25 The case for partnerships for sustainable development | 356 |
3 Sustainable development partnerships at WSSD | 357 |
32 Criteriaguiding principles debate | 358 |
33 WSSD OUTCOMES | 359 |
35 Regional implementation meetings | 360 |
4 Analysis | 361 |
43 Has the case for partnerships been established? | 363 |
45 Political assessment | 366 |
53 Promotion of partnerships for sustainable development pfsd | 368 |
54 Political | 369 |
6 Conclusions | 370 |
References | 371 |
IS MULTILATERALISM THE FUTURE? SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT OR GLOBALISATION AS A COMPREHENSIVE VISION OF THE F... | 373 |
1 Introduction | 374 |
a neverending story | 376 |
the new face of multilateralism? | 379 |
42 The Johannesburg Declaration | 384 |
actionoriented decisions and timebound measures? | 387 |
too little multilateralism to bridge the gap between economic globalization and sustainable development | 391 |
393 | |
List of Abbreviations | 395 |
403 | |
Other editions - View all
The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg Conference L. Hens,Bhaskar Nath Limited preview - 2006 |
The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg Conference L. Hens,Bhaskar Nath No preview available - 2010 |
The World Summit on Sustainable Development: The Johannesburg Conference L. Hens,Bhaskar Nath No preview available - 2009 |
Common terms and phrases
achieve action activities Africa Agenda 21 approach areas assessment called capacity challenges chapter chemicals civil society climate change Commission commitments concept concern Conference consumption Convention corporate developing countries discussion diseases economic effective energy environment environmental established example framework funds further future global governance groups growth human impact implementation important improve increase industry initiatives institutions integrated investment islands issues Johannesburg major means meeting natural NGOs objectives organisations Organization participation particularly partnerships patterns Plan of Implementation political pollution poor population poverty principles problems production production and consumption Programme progress promote protection reduce reference regional Report responsibility result risk role scientific sector social stakeholders strategies Summit sustainable development trade UNEP United Nations World World Summit WSSD