Syllabus Edition

First teaching 2025

First exams 2027

Strategies to achieve sustainable development (Cambridge (CIE) IGCSE Geography): Revision Note

Exam code: 0460 & 0976

Jacque Cartwright

Written by: Jacque Cartwright

Reviewed by: Bridgette Barrett

Updated on

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

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Jacque Cartwright

Author: Jacque Cartwright

Expertise: Geography Content Creator

Jacque graduated from the Open University with a BSc in Environmental Science and Geography before doing her PGCE with the University of St David’s, Swansea. Teaching is her passion and has taught across a wide range of specifications – GCSE/IGCSE and IB but particularly loves teaching the A-level Geography. For the past 5 years Jacque has been teaching online for international schools, and she knows what is needed to get the top scores on those pesky geography exams.

Bridgette Barrett

Reviewer: Bridgette Barrett

Expertise: Geography, History, Religious Studies & Environmental Studies Subject Lead

After graduating with a degree in Geography, Bridgette completed a PGCE over 30 years ago. She later gained an MA Learning, Technology and Education from the University of Nottingham focussing on online learning. At a time when the study of geography has never been more important, Bridgette is passionate about creating content which supports students in achieving their potential in geography and builds their confidence.