“…One strand of research suggests that the 2030 Agenda does not question the processes in which national and global wealth and power disparities are formed while also noting the limitations as to who is involved in the goal-setting process, how actors are linked and empowered, what resources they have and how and by whom transparency and accountability are ensured (Fukuda-Parr and McNeill, 2019;Kanie and Biermann, 2017). Some of the major governance challenges facing the SDGs implementation are collective action, trade-offs and accountability (Bowen et al, 2017); the role of democratic institutions and participation (Glass and Newig, 2019); inclusive goal-setting, detachment from the international legal and regulatory system and weak institutional arrangements at various scales (Biermann et al, 2017;Kanie and Biermann, 2017); health, food and gender equality (Dalby et al, 2019;Seyfi et al, 2022); interlinkages and synergies between goals and substantive content in a systemic perspective, policy coherence and policy integration (Weitz et al, 2018); and climate change and sustainable energy (Monkelbaan, 2019).…”