Ricker, BrittaEppinga, MaartenJurgens, SharonaMijts, Eric2024-11-072024-11-072024-09-09https://doi.org/10.5194/ica-abs-7-137-2024https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14473/1113Abstr. Int. Cartogr. Assoc., 7, 137Mapping the United Nations (UN) Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) is necessary to identify where to place localized interventions to meet these goals. The UN Statistics Agency is responsible for establishing and curating SDG indicator data to measure how close or far each country is to achieving the goals. Each UN member state may voluntarily share their SDG indicator data as a form of data sovereignty. While the value of mapping the SDGs is clear, governments are not urged to collect or share spatial data for mapping the SDGs. Many countries with the most missing SDG data are islands, some of the most vulnerable countries (Gosling-Goldsmith et al., 2020). SDG indicators related to the environment can be challenging to collect and require localized data collection strategies, otherwise valuable and vulnerable ecosystems may risk being missed from data collection efforts (Hák et al., 2016; Kulonen et al., 2019).Mapping for Sustainable Development: Comparing different mapping techniques for monitoring mangroves to reach SDG 15 and 6C3 Conference abstracthttps://ica-abs.copernicus.org/articles/7/137/2024/