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Special Issue "Geospatiality and Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)"

*Short description*

The rapid human development and the contradiction between human and
society, and economy and environment has greatly hindered the
implementation of sustainable development strategy (Zhao and Wu, 2019). In
order to draw more attention on sustainable development from governments,
the United Nations adopted the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), 169
sub-goals and 232 targets at the United Nations Summit on Sustainable
Development in 2015. Ever since then, many experts and researchers have
been making great efforts to monitor, assess and realise SDGs. For example,
while some researchers analysed the application of SDGs to ecology and
environment (Salleh, 2016; Yenneti et al., 2016), others applied SDGs to
humanities and education (Chowdhury and Koya, 2017; Sterling, 2014). Yet
there are many difficulties. The sheer volume of geospatial data and the
different understanding of the SDG indicators make this task more
difficult. Further, there are relatively limited studies that attempt to
more holistically capture the varieties of geospatial factors and contexts
behind the articulation of SDGs.

In order to develop a vision for ensuring sustainable development, a
discussion of the SDGs needs careful examination through new concepts,
approaches and solutions to the problems. This special issue will include,
but not limited to, studies on SDGs, monitoring and evaluation of SDGs, the
use of geospatial technologies in assessing challenges in implementation of
SDGs, the geospatiality of social and gender dimensions in SDG research and
other development-related themes. The issue will promote integrated
transdisciplinary approaches in SDGs research.

While this issue invites papers from all parts of the world, we keenly
encourage and see this as an opportunity for young scholars in the
developing world. This special issue will provide a publication platform
for papers presented by outstanding young and early career geographers at
the sessions organised by the IGU-Task Force for Young and Early Career
Geographers (IGU-YECG) since from its establishment (Beijing, 2016) to the
upcoming 34th IGC at Istanbul (2020). There is a cutting-edge research by
young and early career scholars which deserves to be recognised and
popularised.

We also invite submissions which can help enhance the understandings and
conceptualisations of the SDGs. In particular, we are interested in
submissions that explore ‘new geographies of theory’ and ‘new conceptual
vectors’. The submissions may be concerned with addressing SDGs at the
local, regional, and global scales, in various geographical contexts and at
multiple dimensions (economic, social, political, developmental, and
environmental). The contributions may be generic in nature or specific to a
particular geographical region, with regard to regional diversity in
climate, development, economic structure, and socioeconomic
characteristics, among other factors. Original work that adopts a
relational perspective and showcase how to address theoretical,
methodological, and empirical issues in implementation of SDGs is
particularly welcome.

Potential topics include, but are not restricted to, the following:

   - New concepts and approaches to SDG implementation (across the global
   South and the global North, and bridging the gap between them).
   - Innovative techniques and methodologies to measure and to
   differentiate the goals and indicators of SDGs.
   - History, evolution and discourses of SDGs in different
   scalar/geographical dimensions.
   - Smart and ground-breaking technologies, strategies and real-time
   applications in achieving or implementation of SDGs in different
   geo-spatial and social contexts (global/local; everyday life with an
   emphasis on urban scale, for developing and developed world).
   - Role of institutions, macro and micro level actors, action agents,
   policy options and effects, laws and regulations, governance and planning
   and other policy, industry and action initiatives in SDGs.
   - Best practice initiatives (individual, behavioural and community-led)
   and successful examples.

*Submission of full papers: *1 May 2020

Submit paper to this Special Issue
<https://ges.rgo.ru/index.php/jour/author/submit/1>

Regards,

The Guest Editors
*Dr. Gaurav Sikka*
*Dr. Komali Yenneti*
*Prof. R.B. Singh*
*Prof. Vladimir Tikunov*

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