Science in Negotiation: The Role of Scientific Evidence in Shaping the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals, 2012-2015

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This book explores the role of scientific evidence within United Nations (UN) deliberation by examining the negotiation of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), endorsed by Member States in 2015. Using the SDGs as a case study, this book addresses a key gap in our understanding of the role of evidence in contemporary international policy-making. It is structured around three overarching questions: (1) how does scientific evidence influence multilateral policy development within the UN General Assembly? (2) how did evidence shape the goals and targets that constitute the SDGs?; and (3) how did institutional arrangements and non-state actor engagements mediate the evidence-to-policy process in the development of the SDGs? The ultimate intention is to tease out lessons on global policy-making and to understand the influence of different evidence inputs and institutional factors in shaping outcomes.

To understand the value afforded to scientific evidence within multilateral deliberation, a conceptual framework is provided drawing upon literature from policy studies and political science, including recent theories of evidence-informed policy-making and new institutionalism. It posits that the success or failure of evidence informing global political processes rests upon the representation and access of scientific stakeholders, levels of community organisation, the framing and presentation of evidence, and time, including the duration over which evidence and key conceptual ideas are presented. Cutting across the discussion is the fundamental question of whose evidence counts and how expertise is defined? The framework is tested with specific reference to three themes that were prominent during the SDG negotiation process; public health (articulated in SDG 3), urban sustainability (articulated in SDG 11), and data and information systems (which were a cross-cutting theme of the dialogue). Within each, scientific communities had specific demands and through an exploration of key literature, including evidence inputs and UN documentation, as well as through key informant interviews, the translation of these scientific ideas into policy priorities is uncovered. 

The intended audiences of this book include academic practitioners studying evidence to policy processes, multilateral negotiation and/or UN policy planning. The book also intends to provide useful insights for policy makers, including UN diplomats, officials and staff working to improve the quality of evidence communication and uptake within multilateral institutions. Finally, it aims to support the whole global academic and scientific community, including students of public policy and political science, by providing insights on how to input into, influence, and even shape international evidence-informed policy-making.

Author(s): Jessica Espey
Series: Sustainable Development Goals Series
Publisher: Springer
Year: 2022

Language: English
Pages: 128
City: Cham

Preface
Acknowledgements
Abstract
Contents
List of Figures
List of Tables
Acronyms
1: Why Consider Science in International Policy?
1.1 Introducing the Sectoral Analysis: Health, Urban Sustainability and Data
1.2 How This Book Contributes to Existing Literature
1.3 Outline of the Book
1.4 Key Findings
2: Scientific Evidence in Policy Processes: Concepts and Histories
2.1 Historical Debates Over Evidence and Policy
2.2 How Do Evidence and Policy Intersect?
2.3 Theorising Evidence to Policy Processes
2.4 The Influence of Institutions on Evidence Uptake
2.5 A Framework for Analysing Evidence Uptake in Multilateral Policy Processes
2.5.1 Representation and Access
2.5.2 The Organisation of Epistemic Communities
2.5.3 Framing and Presentation
2.5.4 Temporal Dynamics: Concurrency and Prolonged Engagements
3: Tracing the SDG Deliberation Process: A Focus on Health, Cities and Data
3.1 Outline of the Post-2015 Deliberative Process and Key Actors
3.2 An Introduction to the Debates Relating to Public Health, Urban Sustainability and Data
3.3 Tracing the Key Conceptual Debates
3.3.1 Health
3.3.1.1 Universal Health Coverage and Rights-Based Approaches
3.3.1.2 The MDG+ Agenda and Outcome-Focused Arguments
3.3.2 Urban
3.3.2.1 Continuing the MDG Agenda: Fulfilling Basic Urban Needs
3.3.2.2 Rights-Based Arguments
3.3.2.3 Acknowledging Urban Complexity
3.3.2.4 New Forms of Governance
3.3.3 Data
3.3.3.1 Technocratic Arguments
3.3.3.2 Rights-Based Arguments
3.4 Consensus-Building Processes
3.4.1 New Modes of Deliberation: Shared Seats
3.4.2 Expert Panels
3.4.3 Thematic Dialogues
3.4.4 The High-Level Panel
3.4.5 High-Profile Academic Engagement
3.4.6 Focus on Quantification
4: Influencing Multilateral Policy Processes Through Science
4.1 Representation and Access
4.1.1 The Representation of Science in Formal Processes
4.1.2 Access Through New Institutional Arrangements
4.1.3 The (Pre)Dominance of Political Interests
4.1.4 The Persistence of a (Northern) Policy-Elite
4.2 The Organisation of Epistemic Communities
4.3 Framing
4.3.1 Evidence Over Science
4.3.2 Framing Science as a Political Tool
4.4 Temporal Dynamics: The Long-Term Socialisation of Ideas
5: Conclusion: Evolving Evidence Systems in the Institutions of Global Governance
5.1 Future Research
Annex 1: Key Informant Interviews
Annex 2: The Research Methods Underpinning This Analysis
References
Academic and Secondary Literature
Government Negotiation Statements and UN Documents
Index