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Full Description
Addressing the big questions to advance the debate on good governance for sustainable development, this book asks: What is governance for sustainable development? What makes governance 'good'? And what are the factors that inhibit good governance?
With contributions from experts in Development Studies, Economics, Management, Environmental Science, Politics, and Public Policy, this interdisciplinary volume critically engages with the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) whilst reflecting on the inherently political nature of good governance. Chapters draw on cases from a range of geographical contexts (local, national, supranational, and global) and diverse policy areas, including global environmental and labour governance, gender equality, decolonial governance in the Coral Triangle, supranational governance in the EU, and resource governance in the car industry. By doing so, the book provides an overview of the current challenges and possibilities for achieving good governance and sustainable development, and calls for a return to the critical spirit of the original concept of good governance, to reclaim it as the radical idea it was intended to be.
This book will act as an insightful and valuable guide for academics, scholars, and students of Development Studies, Economics, Politics, Environmental Science, and Management, as well as policymakers and practitioners working in sustainable development.
Contents
1. Introduction Part 1: Good Governance: Realities and Possibilities 2. Re-governing the Self-governing: Environmental Governance is Not About the Environment 3. Good Labour Governance 4. Gender Equality and Good Governance: Women's Political Leadership and Participation 5. Decolonial Governance as Good Governance Part 2. Challenges to Good Governance 6. After Three Decades of Sustainable Development, How Do Public and Private Organisations in Thailand Govern Sustainability Within Their Organisation? 7. Good Governance in Supranational Settings: The Principle of Participation and Responsiveness to Public Demands in the EU 8. No Green Car: Naïve, Balanced, and Bleak Views of Governance



