TY - JOUR
T1 - Spatializing the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
T2 - The role of urbanization in SDGs localization across spatial scales
AU - Katsikis, Nikos
AU - Saraceno, Pier Paolo
AU - Stamos, Iraklis
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - This paper examines the question of localizing SDGs by linking them to the variegated spatialities of urbanization. The guiding hypothesis is that the processes underlying SDGs are connected to dominant urbanization processes that characterize subnational regions, i.e. processes of concentrated, or extended urbanization, according to the Planetary Urbanization literature. It focuses on the relationship of a selection of 6 Sustainable Development Goals and 52 associated targets with the scales and landscapes produced through concentrated and extended urbanization processes, aiming to contribute to a systematic understanding on the degree to which they can be effectively monitored and achieved at subnational levels. As these processes are inherently multiscalar, and connect variegated landscapes across and within territories, the implementation of SDGs would need to acknowledge, contextualize, and transform this diversity of scales and landscapes. The paper develops a theoretical and conceptual apparatus for comprehending and assessing the relationship of SDGs with core urbanization processes that largely shape the production of space and its social and ecological inequalities, thus spatializing, and ‘urbanizing’ them in order to question the capacity for localizing them.
AB - This paper examines the question of localizing SDGs by linking them to the variegated spatialities of urbanization. The guiding hypothesis is that the processes underlying SDGs are connected to dominant urbanization processes that characterize subnational regions, i.e. processes of concentrated, or extended urbanization, according to the Planetary Urbanization literature. It focuses on the relationship of a selection of 6 Sustainable Development Goals and 52 associated targets with the scales and landscapes produced through concentrated and extended urbanization processes, aiming to contribute to a systematic understanding on the degree to which they can be effectively monitored and achieved at subnational levels. As these processes are inherently multiscalar, and connect variegated landscapes across and within territories, the implementation of SDGs would need to acknowledge, contextualize, and transform this diversity of scales and landscapes. The paper develops a theoretical and conceptual apparatus for comprehending and assessing the relationship of SDGs with core urbanization processes that largely shape the production of space and its social and ecological inequalities, thus spatializing, and ‘urbanizing’ them in order to question the capacity for localizing them.
KW - localization
KW - planetary urbanization
KW - spatialization
KW - Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105017027604&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/1523908X.2025.2553014
DO - 10.1080/1523908X.2025.2553014
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105017027604
SN - 1523-908X
JO - Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning
JF - Journal of Environmental Policy and Planning
M1 - 2553014
ER -