Recalibrating ESG conditionalities in development finance: a doctrinal and policy analysis of The World Bank environmental and social framework and its implications for equitable development in Sub-Saharan Africa

dc.contributor.author Lubogo Isaac Christopher; Lubogo, Richard Kaira and Mulungi, Aisha
dc.date.accessioned 2026-04-16T13:35:32Z
dc.date.available 2026-04-16T13:35:32Z
dc.date.issued 2026
dc.description Journal article
dc.description.abstract This paper critically examines the Environmental and Social Framework (ESF) of the World Bank as the central instrument of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) regulation in contemporary multilateral development finance. Deployed across more than 100borrowingstates, the ESF purports to entrench sustainable and inclusive development. Yet its operationalisation produces profound tensions with the imperatives of equity, developmental sovereignty, and proportionate governance in the Global South. Drawing on a doctrinal and policy-oriented methodology — combining institutional legal analysis, comparative public law, and development economics — this paper interrogates the legal architecture and practical implications of the ESF's Environmental and Social Standards (ESS1–ESS10). It argues that the Framework functions as a quasi-binding conditionality regime whose universal application conceals structural asymmetries disadvantageous to low- and middle-income countries. The paper introduces and theorises the concept of 'ESG asymmetry', defined as the systemic imbalance whereby developing economies are subjected to the most stringent sustainability compliance obligations despite having contributed least to global environmental degradation. Sub-Saharan Africa, and Uganda in particular, furnishes the empirical terrain for doctrinal analysis, illuminating the collision between ESG standards and plural legal systems, informal labour markets, and deficient institutional capacity. The paper concludes by advancing a four- principle recalibrated ESG framework — incorporating context-sensitive application, capacity- based compliance, an ESG Equity Index, and development-first sequencing —as a legally and empirically grounded pathway towards a more just international development finance architecture.
dc.identifier.citation Lubogo, I. C.; Lubogo, R. K. and Mulungi, A. (2026). Recalibrating ESG conditionalities in development finance: a doctrinal and policy analysis of The World Bank environmental and social framework and its implications for equitable development in Sub-Saharan Africa; published by Suigeneris Publishing House, Kampala.
dc.identifier.uri https://makir.mak.ac.ug/handle/10570/16803
dc.language.iso en
dc.publisher Suigeneris Publishing House
dc.title Recalibrating ESG conditionalities in development finance: a doctrinal and policy analysis of The World Bank environmental and social framework and its implications for equitable development in Sub-Saharan Africa
dc.type Article
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