A new, first-of-its-kind UN report demonstrates that progress towards achievement of Sustainable Development Goal (SDG) 16 is worryingly slow, with limited information availability to drive evidence-informed policies. The report calls for urgent action and substantial investment on Goal 16 to expand data coverage that can help accelerate progress across all SDGs.
A new UN global progress report on indicators under Sustainable Development Goal 16 (SDG16) released today shows that little or no progress has been made, with just seven years to go until 2030.
Launched at the helm of the SDGs Summit and the 78th UN General Assembly, the report reflects that human rights commitments are not being met, violence is increasing, inequality is hindering inclusive decision-making and corruption is eroding the social contract. The report is the first-of-its-kind, jointly produced by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC), and the United Nations Human Rights Office.
While there has been significant progress made on developing global methodologies and tools on governance, justice, and human rights-related indicators, the report also reveals that there are glaring data gaps. With SDG 16 being one of the goals with the least amount of data available, there is a pressing need to invest in high-quality, disaggregated data to leave no one behind.
Such data will not only enable the achievement of the global targets for peace, justice, and inclusion, but will also be crucial to achieving targets across all the Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.
“To achieve the targets under Goal 16 by 2030, we need to rethink, recalibrate and redouble our efforts. That is why we are pleased to launch a brand-new UN report that exposes the success and failures of our collective effort to reach Goal 16 and provides us with the latest data to guide our future actions”, stated Haoliang Xu, Associate Administrator, UNDP.
“Peace and prosperity for people and the planet – the promise the international community made when adopting the SDGs – will only be possible with decisive and innovative action on SDG 16,” stated Ghada Waly, Executive Director of UNODC. “We must act now to strengthen the rule of law, make justice accessible to all, and build effective, accountable and inclusive institutions around the world. I encourage the international community to use this report to develop practical solutions to create a peaceful, just, and inclusive global society.”
The new report is based on internationally agreed SDG 16 indicators that encompass a wide range of civil, political, economic and social rights, all anchored in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, whose 75th anniversary we celebrate this year.
“Human rights are at the heart of the 2030 Agenda and SDG 16 is the lever to effect transformative change for the rest of the Goals,” said UN Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, Ilze Brands Kehris. “That is why this important report urges all States to accelerate progress towards achieving SDG 16, while also calling for new partnerships to stimulate the compilation and use of human rights statistics. Harnessing data on the protection of human rights defenders who denounce environmental, social or political rights abuses – as well on all people against discrimination, violence and lack of access to justice or participation – is crucial to delivering on our commitments to leave no one behind”.
Key Findings of the Report:
With the world on track to achieving only 15 per cent of the SDGs, this report sounds a clear wake up call for urgent action to recalibrate our efforts in order to achieve more peaceful, just, and inclusive societies.
Read the full report here.
Laura Gelbert
OHCHR New York
Email: gelbert[at]un.org