Global Citizenship
A journey to a more sustainable planet
Felix Dodds
• Felix Dodds is a Senior Fellow at the Global Research Institute and a Senior Affiliate of the Water
Institue at the University of North Carolina and an Associate Fellow at the Tellus Institute.
• He was the co-director of the 2014 Nexus Conference on Water, Food, Energy and Climate.
• Felix was the Executive Director of Stakeholder Forum for a Sustainable Future from 1992-2012.
• He has been active at the UN since 1990 attending and actively participating in the World Summits,
Conferences and has advised the Danish and UK Governments and the European Union
• In 2011 he chaired the United Nations DPI 64th NGO conference - 'Sustainable Societies Responsive
Citizens'.
• From 1997-2001 he co-chaired the UN Commission on Sustainable Development NGO Steering
Committee.
• He has coordinated some of the most innovative stakeholder dialogues at the intergovernmental
level Bonn Water (2001), Bonn Energy (2004) and Bonn Nexus (2011).
• He has written or edited thirteen books the latest is due out in May 2016 The Water, Food and
Climate Nexus: Challenges and an agenda for Action which he edited with Jamie Bartram.
• His next one out in September is Negotiating the Sustainable Development Goals: A
transformational agenda for an insecure world with Ambassador David Donoghue and Jimena
Leiva Roesch
March
Felix Dodds www.felixdodds.net2
Frank Borman, Commander of Apollo 8 (1968)
“I think the one overwhelming emotion that
we had was when we saw the earth rising in
the distance over the lunar landscape . . . . It
makes us realize that we all do exist on one
small globe. For from 230,000 miles away it
really is a small planet."
July 22,
Footer text here3
The world becomes more global
• 1970 – First Earth Day
• US Environmental Protection
Agency created
• 1971 Greenpeace founded
• 1971 Friends of the Earth founded
• 1972 First UN Conference on Human
Environment
• 1972 United Nations Environment
Programme created
• 1973 European Union DG
Environment created
July 22, 2012 Footer text here4
We are all connected
July 22, 2012 Footer text here5
• 1984 British Antarctic Survey –finds
a recurring hole in the ozone layer
• 1985 UN Convention on Ozone
Depleting Chemicals
• 1987 UN Montreal Protocol on
Substances that Deplete the Ozone
Layer
• 1989 Entered into force
• By 2050-2070 ozone hole will return
to 1980 levels.
The Roadmap to the SDGs and Paris Climate
Agreement
July 22,
Footer text here6
• Earth Summit 1992
• Millennium Development Goals 2000
• World Summit on Sustainable
Development 2002
• Financial Crisis 2008
• Copenhagen Climate Summit and
Rio+20 2009
• Rio+20 2012
• Sustainable Development Goals and
the Paris Climate Agreement 2015
• Challenges for the UK
Stakeholder engagement in the UN
July 22, 2012 Footer text here7
1992 Earth Summit
Agenda 21 the first UN document to give ‘rights
and responsibilities for stakeholders to engage in
the development and implementation of the UN
Action Plan.
There were nine chapters representing different
sectors of society which were called ‘Major Groups’
1. Youth and Children
2. NGOs,
3. Women,
4. Indigenous Peoples
5. Local Authorities
6. Trade Unions
7. Business and Industry
8. Science andTechnological Community
9. Role of Farmers
Rio+5 and the Commission on Sustainable
Development 1997-2001
July 22, 2012 Footer text here8
1996 the UN General Assembly agreed that at
Rio+5 each of the nine major groups would have
half a day to present on what they are doing to
implementAgenda 21
1998-2001 – two days of the Commission on
Sustainable Development (4 sessions of 3 hours –
12 hours in total) were given over to a multi-
stakeholder dialogue with member states which
drew experience on what has happening on
implementing Agenda 21 and what policy
changes might be needed to enhance
implementation
The journey to Global Citizenship
We are moving from
Representative Democracy (Madison Democracy) to
Participatory Democracy (Jeffersonian Democracy)
But at this point in history we are engaged in
Stakeholder Democracy
July 22, 2012 Footer text here9
Definitions and players
• Stakeholders:Those impacted by a
decision or impact on a decision
• Social movements: are a type of
group action.They are large,
sometimes informal, groupings of
individuals or organizations which
focus on specific political or social
issues. In other words, they carry
out, resist, or undo a social change.
• Civil society: is the "aggregate of
non-governmental organizations
and institutions that manifest
interests and will of citizens.
• Global citizenship: defines a person
who places their identity with a
"global community" above their
identity as a citizen of a particular
nation or place.
• The idea is that one’s identity
transcends geography or political
borders and that the planetary
human community is
interdependent and whole;
humankind is essentially one
July 22, 2012 Footer text here10
Global Agendas
1991 UN Children's Summit
1992 UN Earth Summit
1994 UN Population Conference
1995 UNWomen's Conference
1995UN Social Development Summit
1995WorldTrade Organization
1995 UN Human Settlement
Conference
1996UN Food Summit
1997 UN Kyoto Protocol on Climate
Change
July 22, 2012 Footer text here11
Millennium DevelopmentGoals 2000
July 22, 2012 Footer text here12
2000 Millennium Development Goal
(MDG8)
2000 UN Global Compact launched as a
voluntary initiative based on CEO
commitments to implement universal
sustainability principles and to take
steps to support UN goals: promotes
ten principles – now over 8000
companies and 4000 non-business
participants
World Summit on Sustainable Development
July 22,
Footer text here13
The GreatTransition 2002 –Tellus Institute
July 22, 2012 Footer text here14
ECOSOCO and UNGA
July 22, 2012 Footer text here15
The strange rebirth of sustainable
development
The Economic Downturn
Planetary Boundaries 2010 – Oxfam Doughnut 2011
July 22, 2012 Footer text here16
What did Rio+20 actually do?
July 22,
Footer text here17
Agreed:
• To replace the Commission on Sustainable
Development by the High Level Political Forum
meeting annually and at Heads of State every
four years.
• Upgrading UNEP to meet biannually as a United
Nations Environmental Assembly with ALL
member states
• Accelerated the approach to the Green
Economy
 Set up a process to agree Sustainable
Development Goals to replace Millennium
Development Goals in 2015
 Set up a process to bring financing for
sustainable development to the Third
Financing for Development Conference in 2015
 Set up a process to break the disagreement on
technology transfer
Tellus Institute –The Widening Circle (2012)
• The planetary challenge is urgent and systemic...
The world confronts twenty-first century perils hobbled by twentieth century mindsets
and institutions, a dangerous gap that bodes ill.
• A just and sustainable civilization is still possible...
We can forge a path to a different future: a world of lives enriched and nature resilient.
• A fragmented movement is incapable of systemic transformation…
Civil society efforts are vital, but lack an overarching vision and strategy matched to the
complexity of the historic task.
• A critical social actor is missing from the global stage…
The transition awaits the awakening of a vast cultural and political movement engaged on
all fronts in a supranational project of global citizenship.
• The global citizens movement will be adaptive and polycentric....
The living movement will evolve as a dispersed ecology of associations, spawning centers
of influence in every nation and community.
July 22, 2012 Footer text here18
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development 2015
July 22, 2012 Footer text here19
To replace the MDGs:
• 100 National Consultations
• 11Thematic Consultations
• Two High Level Panel Reports (2011
and 2013)
• Two Secretary General Report
• Rio+20
• 13 sessions of the Sustainable
Development Open Working Group
• 8 Intergovernmental Negotaions
Sessions
July 22, 2012 Footer text here20
Sustainable DevelopmentGoals
July 22, 2012 Footer text here21
What are the differences between the MDGs
and SDGs?
The MDGs just applied to developing
countries
The SDGs apply to ALL countries
The MDGS are addressing development
The SDGs are addressing sustainable
development
The MDGs address the symptomsThe SDGs
address the problems and underlying causes
Sustainable DevelopmentGoals
July 22, 2012 Footer text here22
Global Citizenship –Transforming OurWorld
“A revolution is coming — a revolution which will be peaceful if we are
wise enough; compassionate if we care enough; successful if we are
fortunate enough — But a revolution which is coming whether we will
it or not. We can affect its character; we cannot alter its inevitability.”
(Robert Kennedy, 1966)
July 22, 2012 Footer text here23
Felix Dodds
Senior Fellow at the Global Research Institute
University of North Carolina
+www.felixdodds.net
Twitter: @felixdodds
Email: felix@felixdodds.net
Blog: http://blog.felixdodds.net/

Global citizenship

  • 1.
    Global Citizenship A journeyto a more sustainable planet
  • 2.
    Felix Dodds • FelixDodds is a Senior Fellow at the Global Research Institute and a Senior Affiliate of the Water Institue at the University of North Carolina and an Associate Fellow at the Tellus Institute. • He was the co-director of the 2014 Nexus Conference on Water, Food, Energy and Climate. • Felix was the Executive Director of Stakeholder Forum for a Sustainable Future from 1992-2012. • He has been active at the UN since 1990 attending and actively participating in the World Summits, Conferences and has advised the Danish and UK Governments and the European Union • In 2011 he chaired the United Nations DPI 64th NGO conference - 'Sustainable Societies Responsive Citizens'. • From 1997-2001 he co-chaired the UN Commission on Sustainable Development NGO Steering Committee. • He has coordinated some of the most innovative stakeholder dialogues at the intergovernmental level Bonn Water (2001), Bonn Energy (2004) and Bonn Nexus (2011). • He has written or edited thirteen books the latest is due out in May 2016 The Water, Food and Climate Nexus: Challenges and an agenda for Action which he edited with Jamie Bartram. • His next one out in September is Negotiating the Sustainable Development Goals: A transformational agenda for an insecure world with Ambassador David Donoghue and Jimena Leiva Roesch March Felix Dodds www.felixdodds.net2
  • 3.
    Frank Borman, Commanderof Apollo 8 (1968) “I think the one overwhelming emotion that we had was when we saw the earth rising in the distance over the lunar landscape . . . . It makes us realize that we all do exist on one small globe. For from 230,000 miles away it really is a small planet." July 22, Footer text here3
  • 4.
    The world becomesmore global • 1970 – First Earth Day • US Environmental Protection Agency created • 1971 Greenpeace founded • 1971 Friends of the Earth founded • 1972 First UN Conference on Human Environment • 1972 United Nations Environment Programme created • 1973 European Union DG Environment created July 22, 2012 Footer text here4
  • 5.
    We are allconnected July 22, 2012 Footer text here5 • 1984 British Antarctic Survey –finds a recurring hole in the ozone layer • 1985 UN Convention on Ozone Depleting Chemicals • 1987 UN Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer • 1989 Entered into force • By 2050-2070 ozone hole will return to 1980 levels.
  • 6.
    The Roadmap tothe SDGs and Paris Climate Agreement July 22, Footer text here6 • Earth Summit 1992 • Millennium Development Goals 2000 • World Summit on Sustainable Development 2002 • Financial Crisis 2008 • Copenhagen Climate Summit and Rio+20 2009 • Rio+20 2012 • Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Climate Agreement 2015 • Challenges for the UK
  • 7.
    Stakeholder engagement inthe UN July 22, 2012 Footer text here7 1992 Earth Summit Agenda 21 the first UN document to give ‘rights and responsibilities for stakeholders to engage in the development and implementation of the UN Action Plan. There were nine chapters representing different sectors of society which were called ‘Major Groups’ 1. Youth and Children 2. NGOs, 3. Women, 4. Indigenous Peoples 5. Local Authorities 6. Trade Unions 7. Business and Industry 8. Science andTechnological Community 9. Role of Farmers
  • 8.
    Rio+5 and theCommission on Sustainable Development 1997-2001 July 22, 2012 Footer text here8 1996 the UN General Assembly agreed that at Rio+5 each of the nine major groups would have half a day to present on what they are doing to implementAgenda 21 1998-2001 – two days of the Commission on Sustainable Development (4 sessions of 3 hours – 12 hours in total) were given over to a multi- stakeholder dialogue with member states which drew experience on what has happening on implementing Agenda 21 and what policy changes might be needed to enhance implementation
  • 9.
    The journey toGlobal Citizenship We are moving from Representative Democracy (Madison Democracy) to Participatory Democracy (Jeffersonian Democracy) But at this point in history we are engaged in Stakeholder Democracy July 22, 2012 Footer text here9
  • 10.
    Definitions and players •Stakeholders:Those impacted by a decision or impact on a decision • Social movements: are a type of group action.They are large, sometimes informal, groupings of individuals or organizations which focus on specific political or social issues. In other words, they carry out, resist, or undo a social change. • Civil society: is the "aggregate of non-governmental organizations and institutions that manifest interests and will of citizens. • Global citizenship: defines a person who places their identity with a "global community" above their identity as a citizen of a particular nation or place. • The idea is that one’s identity transcends geography or political borders and that the planetary human community is interdependent and whole; humankind is essentially one July 22, 2012 Footer text here10
  • 11.
    Global Agendas 1991 UNChildren's Summit 1992 UN Earth Summit 1994 UN Population Conference 1995 UNWomen's Conference 1995UN Social Development Summit 1995WorldTrade Organization 1995 UN Human Settlement Conference 1996UN Food Summit 1997 UN Kyoto Protocol on Climate Change July 22, 2012 Footer text here11
  • 12.
    Millennium DevelopmentGoals 2000 July22, 2012 Footer text here12 2000 Millennium Development Goal (MDG8) 2000 UN Global Compact launched as a voluntary initiative based on CEO commitments to implement universal sustainability principles and to take steps to support UN goals: promotes ten principles – now over 8000 companies and 4000 non-business participants
  • 13.
    World Summit onSustainable Development July 22, Footer text here13
  • 14.
    The GreatTransition 2002–Tellus Institute July 22, 2012 Footer text here14
  • 15.
    ECOSOCO and UNGA July22, 2012 Footer text here15 The strange rebirth of sustainable development The Economic Downturn
  • 16.
    Planetary Boundaries 2010– Oxfam Doughnut 2011 July 22, 2012 Footer text here16
  • 17.
    What did Rio+20actually do? July 22, Footer text here17 Agreed: • To replace the Commission on Sustainable Development by the High Level Political Forum meeting annually and at Heads of State every four years. • Upgrading UNEP to meet biannually as a United Nations Environmental Assembly with ALL member states • Accelerated the approach to the Green Economy  Set up a process to agree Sustainable Development Goals to replace Millennium Development Goals in 2015  Set up a process to bring financing for sustainable development to the Third Financing for Development Conference in 2015  Set up a process to break the disagreement on technology transfer
  • 18.
    Tellus Institute –TheWidening Circle (2012) • The planetary challenge is urgent and systemic... The world confronts twenty-first century perils hobbled by twentieth century mindsets and institutions, a dangerous gap that bodes ill. • A just and sustainable civilization is still possible... We can forge a path to a different future: a world of lives enriched and nature resilient. • A fragmented movement is incapable of systemic transformation… Civil society efforts are vital, but lack an overarching vision and strategy matched to the complexity of the historic task. • A critical social actor is missing from the global stage… The transition awaits the awakening of a vast cultural and political movement engaged on all fronts in a supranational project of global citizenship. • The global citizens movement will be adaptive and polycentric.... The living movement will evolve as a dispersed ecology of associations, spawning centers of influence in every nation and community. July 22, 2012 Footer text here18
  • 19.
    2030 Agenda forSustainable Development 2015 July 22, 2012 Footer text here19 To replace the MDGs: • 100 National Consultations • 11Thematic Consultations • Two High Level Panel Reports (2011 and 2013) • Two Secretary General Report • Rio+20 • 13 sessions of the Sustainable Development Open Working Group • 8 Intergovernmental Negotaions Sessions
  • 20.
    July 22, 2012Footer text here20
  • 21.
    Sustainable DevelopmentGoals July 22,2012 Footer text here21 What are the differences between the MDGs and SDGs? The MDGs just applied to developing countries The SDGs apply to ALL countries The MDGS are addressing development The SDGs are addressing sustainable development The MDGs address the symptomsThe SDGs address the problems and underlying causes
  • 22.
  • 23.
    Global Citizenship –TransformingOurWorld “A revolution is coming — a revolution which will be peaceful if we are wise enough; compassionate if we care enough; successful if we are fortunate enough — But a revolution which is coming whether we will it or not. We can affect its character; we cannot alter its inevitability.” (Robert Kennedy, 1966) July 22, 2012 Footer text here23
  • 24.
    Felix Dodds Senior Fellowat the Global Research Institute University of North Carolina +www.felixdodds.net Twitter: @felixdodds Email: felix@felixdodds.net Blog: http://blog.felixdodds.net/