National policy coherence counts for reducing inequality in Global climate and development agendas
Browne, Katherine / Adis Dzebo / Zoha Shawoo / Mario Cardenas / Pierrick Chalaye / Alexia Faus Onbargi / Cassilde Muhoza / Patricia Nicdao / Nokwethaba Makhanya / Navam Niles / Priyatma SinghExternal Publications (2026)
in: Sustainable Development, first published 11.06.2026
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/sd.71117
Open access
International institutions promote policy coherence as crucial to the effective and fair implementation of global sustainability agendas, though the evidence for its benefits is slim. We present here the first systematic cross-country dataset on the consequences of national government efforts to promote policy coherence for vulnerable groups in society. We confirm that coherence is perceived to be beneficial for most groups. However, we find vulnerable groups are largely perceived to bear the brunt of incoherence, while traditionally powerful groups benefit from it in some cases. Based on these findings, we argue that coherence can play an important role in reducing inequality and ensuring countries “Leave No One Behind” in implementing climate and development goals.