Sentences with phrase «integrate economic and social development»

The opportunity that native title can present to governments endeavoring to break the cycle of poverty that pervades Indigenous communities is evidenced by Canadian responses to land claims which integrate economic and social development into the cultural values of the group.
Understood as an aspect of cultural identity, native title can provide the framework for Indigenous development that integrates economic and social development into the cultural values of the group.

Not exact matches

Stakeholders» input was integrated into development of A Healthy Start for Minnesota Children: Supporting Opportunities for Life - Long Health, a theory of change that depicts how public understanding, health in all policies, and community innovation lead to 1) safe, stable, nurturing relationships and environments and 2) social and economic security, which in turn will help the state achieve its ultimate outcome — that every Minnesota child, prenatal to age three years, will thrive in their family and community and achieve their full potential regardless of their race, where they live, or their family's income.
We furthermore expect that the education goal and targets will remain integrated as part of the United Nation's Sustainable Development Goals to be adopted in September 2015, thus recognising the critical role of education for social, economic and environmental justice and the indivisibility of human rights.
The Panel puts special emphasis on integrating the economic, social and environmental dimensions of development, and argues for the introduction of a «new political economy» in order to achieve sustainability.
Its mission is: «To promote the sustainable development of tourism in Guyana that produces maximum economic, social, cultural and environmental benefits, while minimizing negative impacts as part of an integrated national development strategy through the optimal use of human resources and the provision of a product of the highest quality.»
Current understanding supports the creation of a Sustainable Development Council within the UN system to integrate social, economic and environmental policy at the global level.
Among others, we argue for the creation of a new counsel within the U.N. system — a counsel on sustainable development that should better integrate sustainable development changes — the economic, the social, and the environmental pillars of sustainable development at the highest level in the U.N. system.
The United Nations Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) brings together leaders from all sectors of society and regions of the world to «accelerate joint learning and promote integrated approaches that address the interconnected economic, social, and environmental challenges confronting the world.»
The Cornell University Cooperative Extension integrates environmentalism with social and economic causes for sustainable community development throughout New York.
Develop and promote, as appropriate, cost - effective, more efficient, less polluting and safer transport systems, particularly integrated rural and urban mass transit, as well as environmentally sound road networks, taking into account the needs for sustainable social, economic and development priorities, particularly in developing countries.
According to its authors, the objective of sustainable development is to integrate economic, social and environmental policies in order to achieve reduced consumption, social equity, and the preservation and restoration of biodiversity.
Urban agriculture contributes to a wide variety of urban issues and is increasingly integrated in urban land use planning and urban sector programmes (social inclusion and poverty alleviation, local economic development, environmental management, climate change strategies, amongst others) and used as a tool in sustainable city development.
And sustainable development is a process of social advance that accommodates the needs of current and future generations and that successfully integrates economic, social, and environmental considerations in decision makiAnd sustainable development is a process of social advance that accommodates the needs of current and future generations and that successfully integrates economic, social, and environmental considerations in decision makiand future generations and that successfully integrates economic, social, and environmental considerations in decision makiand that successfully integrates economic, social, and environmental considerations in decision makiand environmental considerations in decision making.
In this way native title can itself be integrated into the economic and social development of the broader communities that traditional owners live in.
In this way native title can itself be integrated into the economic and social development of the broader communities and regions that traditional owners live in.
While the discussions in chapters 1 and 2 recommend increasing the governance options available to traditional owners, their capacity to contribute to the economic and social development of the traditional owner group will be expanded by integrating these structures into the local and regional tiers of governance.
The principles presented in this Report for promoting economic and social development through native title, seek to integrate the structures and values that are important to Indigenous peoples with the processes that will maximize the economic and social development outcomes for traditional owner groups.
As a result of this process I am encouraged to think that the principles are sound and bring together, in an integrated way, the essential requirements for achieving economic and social development through the native title system.
However, as is clear from the above discussion, native title has not been fully integrated into government policy making as a means of harnessing the power of Indigenous people's identity based on traditional laws and customs to achieve economic and social development.
Where native title negotiations are not directed through integrated policy objectives towards agreements which lay the foundation for economic and social development then the negotiations will instead be driven by other priorities, such as the need to resolve a legal claim or the land management priorities of the state.
Since the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, sustainable development has emerged as a new paradigm of development, integrating economic growth, social development and environmental protection as interdependent and mutually supportive elements of long - term development.
There have been a number of positive developments in Canada over recent years in terms of integrating the social and economic development of Indigenous people with the recognition of Aboriginal rights through the development of comprehensive land claim settlements.
Stakeholders» input was integrated into development of A Healthy Start for Minnesota Children: Supporting Opportunities for Life - Long Health, a theory of change that depicts how public understanding, health in all policies, and community innovation lead to 1) safe, stable, nurturing relationships and environments and 2) social and economic security, which in turn will help the state achieve its ultimate outcome — that every Minnesota child, prenatal to age three years, will thrive in their family and community and achieve their full potential regardless of their race, where they live, or their family's income.
Sustainability: Economic development in Indigenous communities needs to be integrated with the social, political and cultural values of the group.
Linking economic development outcomes to social, ecological, political and cultural factors supports an approach which integrates the distinct identity of Indigenous people and their unique relationship to land into the development process.
Sustainable development has emerged as a new paradigm of development, integrating economic growth, social development and environmental protection as interdependent and mutually supportive elements of long - term development.
Drawn from the principles underlying the right to development defined in the Declaration on the Right to Development and the international discourse on sustainable development the framework outlined in chapter one seeks to integrate the ethical principles of equality and respect with the economic and social forces that direct contemporarydevelopment defined in the Declaration on the Right to Development and the international discourse on sustainable development the framework outlined in chapter one seeks to integrate the ethical principles of equality and respect with the economic and social forces that direct contemporaryDevelopment and the international discourse on sustainable development the framework outlined in chapter one seeks to integrate the ethical principles of equality and respect with the economic and social forces that direct contemporarydevelopment the framework outlined in chapter one seeks to integrate the ethical principles of equality and respect with the economic and social forces that direct contemporary societies.
Emphasised in this discourse is the need to integrate economic growth, social development and environmental protection as interdependent and mutually supportive elements of long - term development.
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