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  • °Õ³ó±ðÌýÌý(GSDC) will bring together 3000 global thought leaders and innovators to discuss urgent solutions to the sustainability emergency. Challenging the usual thinking on what higher education, governments, businesses and society must do to help society meet the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the congress is a call to action for global universities and businesses to pivot their educational, research, innovation and outreach programmes towards tangible outcomes.Ìý

    UNSW is a content partner for the GSDC, which takes place in Bangkok, Thailand from 10-13 June 2024.Ìý

    The congress will serve as a platform for discussing and advancing the SDGs on a global scale. UNSW staff who are passionate about sustainability and actively engaged or interested in SDG-related research, projects, and initiatives may wish to attend as part of the UNSW delegation.Ìý

    To explore the full agenda, visit theÌý

  • UNSW is increasingly a trusted partner and source of expertise in the Asia Pacific and will participate as aÌýÌýin the GSDC,Ìýsponsoring and leading two events – a roundtable and a workshopÌý- which are being coordinated by the Institute for Global Development as a convenor of UNSW’s sustainable development expertise and regional partnerships to progress the SDGs.ÌýÌý

    UNSW's delegation leaders include:Ìý

    • Professor Verity Firth AM,ÌýVice-President Societal Impact, Equity and Engagement
    • ProfessorÌýRita Henderson, Chair of UNSW Sustainable Development Goals Steering Committee andÌýAssociate Dean (Equity & Diversity), UNSW Engineering
    • ProfessorÌýBruce Watson, PVC Inclusion
    • A. ProfessorÌýGeorge Varughese, Director, UNSW Institute for Global Development
    • ProfessorÌýJulien Epps, Dean, UNSW Engineering.

    More information on the two events is below.

  • UNSW staff who would like to attend the congressÌýcan access discounted in person or virtual tickets using the discount code:ÌýUNSW25. Tickets are available on a first come first served basis. If staff wish to attend the congress in person or virtually, they should contact their Faculty SDG representative to discuss budget allocation from your local area.ÌýÌý

    Faculty SDG representative/s:Ìý

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    Arts, Design & ArchitectureÌý

    Josh Wiesberger, Philip OldfieldÌý

    UNSW Business SchoolÌýÌý

    Nitika Garg, Rhiannon ToutÌý

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    Tom ArthurÌýÌý

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    Rita Henderson, Bo HedwardsÌýÌý

    Law & JusticeÌýÌý

    Bronwen MorganÌý

    Medicine & HealthÌýÌý

    Sara Grafenauer, Emily HogdenÌý

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    Katie WestÌý

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    Please contact Meg Walker if you have any general questions about ticket access.

Two UNSW-hosted events

Roundtable: Water, energy, and food goals post 2030: Can carbon be the currency to a just world?

Tuesday 11 June, 12-1pm (UTC+7)

Sustainably meeting global water, energy and food (WEF) challenges requires aligning global CO2 emission pathways with WEF goals post-2030. With this comes the opportunity for social justice. The approach must bring together traditional knowledge and capacity across water-food systems and new technology uptake to satisfy growing national energy demands. Carbon mitigation must empower communities and traditional land practices to foster water, energy, and food security while supporting biodiversity and valuable ecological services.ÌýÌý

Co-hosted by UNSW and the United Nations Development Coordination Office –Asia Pacific, this roundtable discusses lessons and approaches that align both WEF and carbon strategies in addressing global inequality.

Roundtable speakers

Professor Verity Firth AM

Vice-President Societal Impact, Equity and Engagement, UNSW Sydney

David McLachlan-Karr

Regional Director for Asia-Pacific, United Nations Development Coordination Office in Asia-Pacific

Dr Andrew Dansie

Senior Lecturer and Academic Lead,ÌýHumanitarian Engineering,ÌýUNSW Engineering

Professor Cordelia Selomulya

Associate Dean - Research,ÌýUNSW Engineering

Professor Greg Leslie

Director, UNSW Global Water Institute

Michael Burnside

Manager, UNSW Sustainable Development Reform Hub

Workshop: The last urban migration and a post-SDG agenda for cities: What do we measure and for whom?

Wednesday 12 June, 12-1.30pm (UTC+7)Ìý

The Asia-Pacific region is home to almost half the world’s population. Its growing youth demographic and burgeoning middle class exemplify the rapid socio-economic and demographic shifts that constantly reshape cities. There is urgency around enabling city systems to transition at pace to respond to complex legacies of settlement, marginalisation and neglect. This workshop will bring together practitioners, scholars and those with lived experience from across the region to draw out priorities for a post-SDG agenda for cities. It will explore key stressors through the lens of intergenerational equity, Indigenous knowledge, policy drivers and the role of measurement that matters.

Workshop speakers

Professor Peter Poulet

Director, UNSW Cities Institute Convenor

Keziah Bennett-Brook

Program Head, The George Institute’s Guunu-maana (Heal) Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Program

Thematic lead: Engagement and Power.

Associate Professor Melissa Edwards

Research & Innovation Director, Centre for Social Impact UNSW

Thematic lead: Metrics that matter.

Michael Rose AM

Chair,ÌýCommittee for Sydney

Thematic Lead: Practice and Conceptualisation.

Professor Ben Newell

Deputy Head, UNSW Science
Director, UNSW Institute for Climate Risk & Response

Thematic lead: Climate stressors.

Dr Jinhee Kim

Scientia Fellow, UNSW Cities Institute

Thematic lead: Wellbeing.

Questions

For any general enquiries please contact Rebecca Martin and Meg Walker.Ìý

More information

Sustainability matters

Explore UNSW's contributions to the UN's Sustainable Development Goals, designed to tackle theÌýworld’s most pressing challenges, such as ending poverty and hunger, climate change, the reduction of inequalities and more.

The Institute for Global Development (IGD) is an ambitious initiative set up by UNSW to tackle significant global development challenges.

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Rankings

Find out more about the initiatives and reports UNSW use to assess progress and show performance.