Druckschrift 
Shared security and peace governance : the Malian experience
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o Eradicating extreme poverty and hunger (Food Security Strategy). o Promoting gender equality and women's empowerment (Gender Strategy). o Reducing infant mortality (Health Security). o Improving mother's health (Health Security). o Checking HIV-AIDS and other diseases (Health Security) . o Ensuring a sustainable environment (Environmental Security) o Establishing a World Partnership for Development (I nternational Security ). 1.30. Security and Sustainable Development. Sustainable development implies a viable economic development(meeting the needs of a generation), that is socially fair(horizontal solidarity) and ecologically reproducible(vertical solidarity and transcending generations). It is an approach that aims at improving the living standard of the populations by means of a responsible management of resources, with a view to ensuring inter-generational fairness, while taking into consideration the inherent economic, social, cultural and environment dimensions of development. In other words, a development process that is based on the management of available resources for the well­being of the present generations, without compromising that of future generations. This duty to provide for the future involves preserving, exploiting, using and securing the planet's natural resources. Therein lies the first link between sustainable development and security. The second link has to do with the role of man. Sustainable development is designed to benefit the present and future generations. Human security chooses man as the centre piece of development. Both concepts therefore share the same vision. Consequently, good security governance should reinforce sustainable development and vice versa. 21