(87%) change insignificantly, i.e. that only the
authorities of 13% of cities reflected on the
sustainability course (SDGs). At the same time, their
analysis of the dynamics of the ranking results over
several years showed that the more balanced a city is
in terms of economic, social and environmental
development, the more steadily it develops during an
economic downturn and has a higher development
potential during a period of economic growth in
Russia.
6 RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
The Russian Federation as a whole has fulfilled its
obligations to the UN, having presented the
Voluntary National Review of the Achievement of
the Sustainable Development Goals of the Russian
Federation in July 2020, for which it received
corresponding public recognition. At the same time,
our analysis of the websites did not reveal any
significant changes in the management of regions in
order to reorient them to new goals. The country is
implementing the Concept of the transition of the
Russian Federation to sustainable development
(1998), which is regularly edited. The lack of
legislative consolidation of the SDGs by the
government of the country predetermines the fact that
the regions do not seek to restructure their activities,
which experts note.
The absence of not only regional reports on
sustainable development, but also the absence of
information (formatted according to a unified
methodology) on their own websites indicates both a
low level of information transparency and an
underdeveloped accountability system in the country.
There are no reports and places occupied by the
region in the ratings; therefore, the population does
not have objective information for choosing leaders.
Experts of the Russian Federation, representing
the scientific community in different types of
organizations, are ready to organize monitoring of the
region, but a serious obstacle to their work is the lack
of information on the indicators of their development.
It seems that the statistics committee should develop
a system of mandatory reporting, and think over both
a unified methodology for their measurement and the
development of the system in order to gradually move
from a general assessment of the sustainability of the
region's development to a more detailed system of
parameters that allow assessing the implementation
of the SDGs, including improving the management
system taking into account the recommendations of
the OECD.
7 CONCLUSION
At the moment, Russia has really confirmed its
readiness to follow the path of the SDGs by
submitting a Voluntary National Report to the UN.
We'd most like the next report to reflect not only the
country's successes but also problems, including
shortcomings in regional politics.
Assessing positively the work of the experts, we
would like, on the one hand, to invite them to compile
a ranking of Smart cities, as well as to take into
account the number of such cities in the general
regional reporting. At the same time, we would like
to advise to expand the ranking of the evaluated
criteria as potentially possible, based on the
Recommendations of the OECD and scientists. The
data may not yet be available, but regional specialists
will see their future landmarks.
The transition to free elections of mayors and
governors will not only increase the degree of
democratization of governance in the country, but
also make the policy focused on the population and
not on senior management
REFERENCES
Allen, C., Metternicht, G. and Wiedmann, T. (2019).
Prioritising SDG targets: assessing baselines, gaps and
interlinkages. Sustainable Sciences, 14(1,2): 3-34.
A Territorial Approach to the Sustainable Development
Goals (2020). Synthesis report. OECD. Paris.
Eisenstadt, S. N. and Runiger L. (1984). Patrons, Clients
and Friends. E-book, Cambr., Univ. Press
Gardner, T.A., Benzie, M., Börner, J., Dawkins, E., Fick,
S., Garrett, R., Godar, J., Grimard, A., Lake, S., Larsen,
R.K., Mardas, N., McDermott, C.L., Meyfroidt, P.,
Osbeck, M., Persson, M., Sembres, T., Suavet, C.,.
Strassburg, B.j Trevisan, A., and Wolvekamp P.
(2019). Transparency and sustainability in global
commodity supply chains. World Development, 121:
163-77.
Greco, S., Ishizaka, A., Tasiou, M. and Torrisi, G. (2019).
On the Methodological Framework of Composite
Indices: A Review of the Issues of Weighting,
Aggregation, and Robustness. Social Indicators
Research, 141(1): 61-94.
Huovila, A., Bosch, P. and Airaksinen, M. (2019).
Comparative analysis of standardized indicators for
Smart sustainable cities: What indicators and standards
to use and when? Cities, 89: 141-53.
Lindberg, S.L. (2013). Mapping Accountability: core
concept and subtypes. International Review of
Administrative Sciences, 79(2): 202-26.
Joss, S., Sengers, F., Schraven, D., Caprotti, F. and Dayot,
Y. (2019). The Smart City as Global Discourse: