Abstract
The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) have achieved widespread influence among various state and nonstate actors globally. Although the UN General Assembly intended the SDGs for national governments, local-level actors have emerged as key stakeholders in defining and implementing the goals. Human rights movements have long advocated for the inclusion of local voices in international law. I bridge these discourses to investigate how the SDGs framework can socialize government actors to incorporate human rights principles in local governance. Specifically, I explore how local-level actors have advanced human rights through the localization—local adoption and adaptation—of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development in the case of Los Angeles. The iterative process of localization in Los Angeles illustrates the dialectical process of human rights globalization and emerging institutions that can enable rights realization locally. The case highlights the (1) global and local factors that shape localization, (2) how partnerships lead to more explicit attention to human rights over time, and (3) the ways in which Los Angeles is now shaping localization transnationally. I discuss the critical role of local government actors as agents of norm diffusion, and the need to expand community engagement mechanisms in pursuit of SDG localization and human rights globalization.
Acknowledgments
For their substantial feedback and guidance, I would like to thank Jackie Smith, Michael Goodhart, Anthony Tirado Chase, and Sofia Gruskin.
Notes
1 Many local and regional governments have produced more than one VLR since 2016.
2 The MGoS-CM has expanded since 1992. As of General Assembly Resolution 66/288 (July 27, 2012), it includes older persons, local communities, and migrants; and, as of Resolution 67/290 (July 9, 2013), it includes private philanthropic organizations, foundations, educational and academic entities, persons with disabilities, and volunteer groups.
3 UN Habitat recently launched https://sdglocalization.org/.
4 For more details on the task forces, the projects are available at https://sdg.lacity.gov/our-work/projects.
5 Available at https://sdgdata.lamayor.org/.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Gaea Morales
Gaea Morales is a Ph.D. candidate in Political Science and International Relations at the University of Southern California. Her research studies how global norms translate into local action, with a focus on cities and the intersection of climate and the environment, political economy, and human rights.