What are the Sustainable Development Goals?
The Sustainable Development Goals, otherwise known as the Global Goals, build on the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), eight anti-poverty targets that the world committed to achieving by 2015. The MDGs, adopted in 2000, aimed at an array of issues that included slashing poverty, hunger, disease, gender inequality, and access to water and sanitation. Enormous progress has been made on the MDGs, showing the value of a unifying agenda underpinned by goals and targets. Despite this success, the indignity of poverty has not been ended for all.
The new SDGs, and the broader sustainability agenda, go much further than the MDGs, addressing the root causes of poverty and the universal need for development that works for all people.
UNDP Administrator Helen Clark noted: “This agreement marks an important milestone in putting our world on an inclusive and sustainable course. If we all work together, we have a chance of meeting citizens’ aspirations for peace, prosperity, and wellbeing, and to preserve our planet.”
The Sustainable Development Goals will now finish the job of the MDGs, and ensure that no one is left behind.
UN Division for Sustainable Development
United Nations Development Programme
Sustainable Development Goals
Additional Resources for Teachers:
From World’s Largest Lesson: “In September 2015 World Leaders committed to the Global Goals for Sustainable Development. 17 goals to achieve 3 extraordinary things in the next 15 years. End extreme poverty. Fight inequality and injustice. Fix climate change. To realise these Goals everyone, however young (or old) they are, needs to take part. So join our movement, teach young people about the Goals and encourage them to become the generation that changed the world.” (worldslargestlesson.globalgoals.org/introduce-the-global-goals)
The Worlds Largest Lesson Introduced by Malala Yousafzai from World’s Largest Lesson on Vimeo.