Ben Harbisher is a senior lecturer at De Montfort University, Leicester.
Ben Harbisher's book reveals the unsung heroes of the SDG initiatives and provides competing narratives against those promoted by the multinationals. It is a must-read book for anyone who is interested in uncovering the reality and ongoing struggles surrounding the implementation of SDGs among the stakeholders. Ben Harbisher's book stands out as a rich and diverse collection of critical analyses about sustainability as a political concept and the mediation of the UN Sustainable Development Goals agenda. A valuable reading to problematise sustainability while debates shift away from dominant ideals of global progress and toward self-preservation instincts in post-pandemic societies. Harbisher has collected 11 essays reviewing the 17 Sustainable Development Goals created by the United Nations under UN Resolution 70/1 to promote life, equality, health, and the environment. The Sustainable Development Goals include aspirations such as ending poverty and hunger, promoting health and well-being, ending gender inequality, creating sustainable cities and communities, and developing partnerships to work toward these goals. The book is divided into three sections, focusing on social theory and politics, journalistic mediation and framing, and sustainability and education. Recommended. Graduate students, faculty, and professionals. This volume makes an important contribution to a timely and long-standing issue: the promises and pitfalls of supranational attempts to tackle global vulnerabilities. Discussing the discourses surrounding these attempts and the exclusions they create, it is an essential reading for anyone interested in public policy, global inequalities, and social movements.