世界银行如何参与减少不平等的可持续发展目标:一个组织柔术的案例

Melanie van Driel, F. Biermann, M. J. Vijge, Rakhyun E. Kim
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2015年,联合国商定了17项可持续发展目标(sdg),以动员包括国际组织在内的各方行为体,推动全球向可持续发展转型。期望国际组织将协助实施这些目标,并鼓励、支持或协调其他组织为实现这些目标而努力。但是,在过去的8年里,国际组织是否因为可持续发展目标而改变了他们的行为?我们将深入研究世界银行作为一个具有广泛发展使命的有影响力的国际组织如何参与可持续发展目标,特别是旨在减少不平等现象的可持续发展目标10。基于对326份关键文件的研究和23次访谈的混合方法,我们没有发现可持续发展目标对世界银行产生政策影响的证据。相反,我们得出结论,世界银行对可持续发展目标的参与可以被最好地描述为“组织柔术”,动员了古代武术的隐喻,即演员利用对手的力量和力量来推进自己的地位。我们认为,世界银行利用可持续发展目标不断增长的势头来推进其战略目标,而不受可持续发展目标的影响。世行有选择地参与可持续发展目标;将这些目标纳入组织实践的努力仍然有限;它们被纳入国家一级的进程主要是自愿的。这些发现可能也适用于其他强大的国际组织,它们提出了关于全球目标设定能否产生变革性影响的重要问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
How the World Bank Engages with the Sustainable Development Goal on Reducing Inequalities: A Case of Organizational Jiu-Jitsu
In 2015, the United Nations agreed on seventeen Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) to mobilize various actors, including international organizations, for a global transformation toward sustainability. The expectation was that international organizations would assist in the implementation of the goals and encourage, support, or coordinate others to work toward their achievement. But have international organizations over the last 8 years changed their behavior because of the SDGs? We present an in-depth examination of how the World Bank, an influential international organization with a broad development mandate, has engaged with the SDGs, especially with SDG 10 that seeks to reduce inequalities. Based on a mixed-method approach that included the study of 326 key documents and 23 interviews, we found no evidence of a policy impact of the SDGs on the World Bank. Instead, we conclude that the World Bank’s engagement with the SDGs can best be described as “organizational jiu-jitsu,” mobilizing the metaphor of the ancient martial art in which an actor uses the force and strength of the opponent to advance one’s own position. We argue that the World Bank used the growing momentum of the SDGs to further its strategic objectives without being influenced by the SDGs in turn. The bank engaged with the SDGs selectively; efforts to integrate the goals into organizational practices remained limited; and their inclusion in country-level processes is primarily voluntary. These findings, which may be similar for other powerful international organizations, raise important questions about the ability of global goal-setting to realize a transformative impact.
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