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Policy coherence for sustainable development (at global level)
Since the beginning of the 2000s, scholars of global politics have recognized that international problems could not be studied in isolation from one another anymore, contrary to what the international regime approach of the 1990s was supposing. Rather, concepts such as ‘institutional interactions’, ‘regime complexes’, ‘global governance architectures’ and more recently ‘complex systems’ and ‘adaptive systems’ have been coined to describe the cross-cutting institutional arrangements that form the structures that manage (or at least try to) global governance (Day 2024). These arrangements are made of many different international institutions such as international organizations, international treaties and international partnerships across several international regimes on a wide diversity of problems. Since these structures are formed by many different elements, the issue of their coherence has been at the centre of attention in global politics since the 2010s (Morin and Orsini 2013).
Bled, A. (2025). Policy coherence for sustainable development (at global level). In Frank Biermann, Thomas Hickmann, Yi hyun Kang, Carole-Anne Sénit, and Yixian Sun (ed.), Essential Concepts for Implementing the Sustainable Development Goals An A-Z Guide (Routledge, p. p. 121-122). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003519560