Abstract:
Sustainable development (SD) has become a popular catchphrase in
contemporary development discourse. However, in spite of its pervasiveness and
the massive popularity it has garnered over the years, the concept still seems
unclear as many people continue to ask questions about its meaning and history, as
well as what it entails and implies for development theory and practice. The purpose
of this paper is to contribute to the discourse on SD by further explaining the
paradigm and its implications for human thinking and actions in the quest for
sustainable development. This is done through extensive literature review,
combining aspects of the “Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and
Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines and the Recursive Content Abstraction (RCA)
analytical approach. The paper finds and argues that the entire issue of sustainable
development centres around inter- and intragenerational equity anchored essentially
on three-dimensional distinct but interconnected pillars, namely the environment,
economy, and society. Decision-makers need to be constantly mindful of the
relationships, complementarities, and trade-offs among these pillars and ensure
responsible human behaviour and actions at the international, national, community and individual levels in order to uphold and promote the tenets of this paradigm in
the interest of human development. More needs to be done by the key players—
particularly the United Nations (UN), governments, private sector, and civil society
organisations—in terms of policies, education and regulation on social, economic
and environmental resource management to ensure that everyone is sustainable
development aware, conscious, cultured and compliant.