Local governments are key to establishing public policies linked to the 2030 Agenda.
To achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), public innovation is essential, and one
of the essential pillars is transversality and partnerships (internal and external). This implies a
transformative political, technical, and institutional culture that some authors have called, in the
case of Andalusia, Spain, a “culture of solidarity”, as many of the elements of the 2030 Agenda are
established within local organizations. This article aims to answer the question: Do Andalusian
local authorities have an organizational culture and structure that facilitates the localization of the
SDGs? To do so, it analyzes the conditioning factors, facilitators, and barriers that exist in local
governments to advance in the mainstreaming of the localization and development processes of the
2030 Agenda in their territories. A study has been carried out on the perception of local technicians
and the assessment of their own organization aligned with the 2030 Agenda. The results obtained
indicate that local governments in Andalusia have made efforts to establish social actions and policies
against poverty. The 2030 Agenda is perceived as an opportunity to transform local entities, with
more open, collaborative, transversal, and interconnected institutions