![]() |
||||||||||
IIED Links: |
|
Peer review of The Netherlands National Strategy for Sustainable Development |
Related Links: |
|
|
|
Theme: Strategies for sustainable development Background Various mechanisms are used to monitor progress and implementation of National Strategies for Sustainable Development (NSDS), eg internal reviews, external auditing, parliamentary and budgetary reviews, and indicator-based monitoring. In 2004-05, at the request of the French government, Barry Dalal-Clayton, IIED Senior Fellow and Director of the Strategic planning and Assessment Programme, developed an options-based peer review approach. It sought to meet several guiding factors: cost-effective, relatively simple and replicable approach, relatively short time, non-judgemental (not to ‘name and shame’), sharing of experience and lessons. The approach was successfully applied to the French NSDS with the peer team (one each from government and an NGO) from Belgium, Ghana, Mauritius and the UK. This approach was then adopted by the European Commission for the voluntary peer review of EU member state strategies – a commitment made in the 2006 EU SD strategy. And a similar approach has been promoted by UNDESA in other countries, based on the shared-learning approach, eg Korea. The Netherlands respondsIn response to the EU call, in 2006, the Netherlands decided to undertake a peer review of its NSDS. The process was managed by the Netherlands Council for Research on Spatial Planning, Nature and the Environment (RMNO). Barry Dalal-Clayton was engaged to advice the RMNO and peers on the process and act as facilitator. 12 experts from three countries (Finland, Germany and South Africa) were invited to serve as peers (four per country representing government, business and science, civil society (NGO) and academia). The peers were asked to review the existing Dutch NSDS and to make recommendations on how best to develop a new Sustainable Development Strategy (SDS) based on their own and other international experiences. The processThe review involved several steps:
Download final report (PDF 1.69MB) Influencing the new government The peer review appears to have had significant influence. It was concluded when the new Dutch government was in its first 100 days of office and was developing its policy programme. The coalition agreement had already, and perhaps uniquely, placed sustainable development as a cornerstone of its objectives. But the peers’ recommendations made it very clear that the 2003 Action Programme on Sustainable Development could not be regarded as a sustainable development strategy – for many reasons:
But they strongly urged the government to clearly commit in its policy programme to initiate the development of a new NSDS to provide an overarching umbrella for existing and future policies, plans and actions, and recommended possible mechanisms to manage the process. The Prime Minister and key ministers have signalled that they agree that an appropriate process is need to help mobilise the rest of society around sustainable development, building on the coalition agreement.
http://www.rmno.nl/templates/mercury.asp?page_id=1479&newsitem=12 Contact Barry Dalal-Clayton
Copyright © 2005 International Institute for Environment and Development. |
|
||
|