Syllabus Edition
First teaching 2025
First exams 2027
Strategies to achieve sustainable development (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Geography): Revision Note
Exam code: 0460 & 0976
Achieving sustainable development
There is no single strategy that can close the development gap in a sustainable way
There is often a dispute as to whether trade or aid is better for development
These strategies can be categorised into social, economic and environmental sustainable development and then classified into top-down or bottom-up approaches
Examiner Tips and Tricks
When evaluating a strategy, always ask, 'Who decided this? Who benefits most?'
Social strategies to achieve sustainable development
Definition
These strategies aim to improve quality of life, reduce inequality, and ensure access to basic services like education, healthcare, housing, and clean water
Examples
Education programmes (especially for girls and rural communities)
Improves literacy, job opportunities, and population control through informed family planning
Vaccination and healthcare initiatives
Reduces disease spread and improves life expectancy
Informal settlement upgrading and social housing
Provides safe, secure housing in urban areas without destroying communities
Access to clean water and sanitation
Reduces waterborne diseases and improves hygiene
Outcomes
Long-term improvement in human capital and productivity
Greater equality and social stability
Informed citizens who can contribute to sustainable decision-making
Challenges
Requires long-term investment with slow results
Can be underfunded in LICs
Difficult to implement in conflict zones or areas of weak governance
Economic strategies to achieve sustainable development
Definition
These strategies focus on creating jobs, encouraging fair and inclusive growth, and reducing poverty without harming future prospects
Examples
Microfinance and small business support
Helps people (especially women) start local businesses, especially in LICs
Fair trade initiatives
Ensures farmers and producers in LICs are paid fair prices
Sustainable agriculture and agroforestry
Balances food production with environmental care
Green job creation (e.g. solar technicians, sustainable transport workers)
Promotes employment in eco-friendly sectors
Outcomes
Reduces poverty and income inequality
Builds a resilient economy not dependent on unsustainable industries
Encourages local development and self-sufficiency
Challenges
May still rely on external funding or aid
Corruption or weak infrastructure can reduce effectiveness
Global market changes can impact vulnerable economies
Environmental strategies to achieve sustainable development
Definition
These strategies aim to protect ecosystems, reduce pollution and carbon emissions, and ensure natural resources are not overused or destroyed
Examples
Renewable energy (solar, wind, hydro)
Replaces fossil fuels and reduces greenhouse gas emissions
Forest conservation and afforestation
Protects biodiversity and stores carbon
Sustainable fishing and farming
Maintains natural stocks and soil fertility long-term
Waste reduction and recycling programmes
Reduces landfill use and pollution
Outcomes
Slows down climate change
Protects ecosystem services (e.g. pollination, clean water, fertile soil)
Supports eco-tourism and green branding
Challenges
Often expensive to implement upfront
Needs global cooperation (e.g. on climate agreements)
Risk of greenwashing – companies claiming to be sustainable without real action
Top-down vs bottom-up strategies
Type of Strategy | Definition | Who Leads? | Typical Characteristics |
---|---|---|---|
Top-down | Planned and implemented by governments or international organisations, often with large-scale funding | External agencies or national governments | Expensive, large-scale, may not meet local needs fully |
Bottom-up | Initiated by local people or communities, often on a small scale | NGOs, grassroots groups, community leaders | Low-cost, locally appropriate, high community involvement |
Top-down can be effective and helpful, but may ignore local context
Bottom-up is more inclusive and appropriate, but may lack funding or scalability
Best results often come from a blend of both: Government provides infrastructure, and communities manage and maintain it
Top-down strategies
These tend to be government-led or donor-funded, aiming for widespread impact:
Vaccination and national healthcare programmes are social strategy, often run by ministries of health or international bodies (e.g. WHO)
National slum upgrading schemes tend to be large-scale government-led improvements (e.g. sewage systems, housing infrastructure)
Renewable energy projects like hydroelectric dams are environmental strategies but are costly and often run by states or corporations
Green job creation as part of national economic plans are economic strategies that involve planning from national development offices or ministries
Afforestation programmes led by national parks authorities are environmental strategies and may involve land use laws and state-owned land
Bottom-up strategies
These are usually community-led and locally driven, addressing immediate local needs:
Microfinance and small business support are economic strategies that are often managed by NGOs or co-operatives empowering individuals (especially women)
Fair trade schemes is an economic strategy that supports small farmers and local producers with better market access
Community-based education programmes are social strategies where NGOs train local teachers or build schools with community help
Recycling and local waste management initiatives are environmental strategies led by community groups or NGOs in urban neighbourhoods
Sustainable agriculture practices (e.g. composting, crop rotation) fit into environmental and economic strategies and are usually adopted by small-scale farmers and local training groups
You've read 0 of your 5 free revision notes this week
Unlock more, it's free!
Did this page help you?