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The Wiley Handbook of Sustainability in Higher Education Learning and Teaching


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Education 8 (3): 317–338.

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Part I Transforming the Curriculum – Pedagogy Focused Initiatives

       Zoe Robinson, Rebecca Laycock Pedersen, and Sarah Briggs

      2.1.1 Education for Sustainability in Higher Education

      There is increasing acknowledgment of the responsibility of universities in contributing to a more sustainable future, and our role as educators in ensuring our students have the agency to enact change (Robinson 2019). The responsibility of universities goes beyond the traditional estates‐based environmental management focus toward a more holistic understanding of the ways in which universities can contribute to sustainability, through their engagement and outreach with local communities, their research activities, as well as their educational mission. Education can be a thread which weaves these areas of responsibility together.

      These potential contributions to sustainability by universities cross the breadth of interconnected and interdependent environmental, social and economic issues that embody our understanding of “sustainability” (Gibson 2006; Purvis et al. 2019). The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), ratified in 2015, comprise 17 goals and 169 targets and, although not without criticism (Adelman 2018; Liverman 2018), might represent the best blueprint we have for a more sustainable future. These models of interconnected issues highlight that sustainability challenges are complex “wicked problems” which can be time‐consuming and difficult to address due to involving multiple stakeholders, dimensions and conflicting needs (Ackoff 1974; Waddock 2013) and therefore need holistic and systemic approaches.

      Quality Education is an SDG in its own right, which alongside targets relating to access to and inclusion within education, includes a specific “education for sustainable development and global citizenship” target with a goal of ensuring that “all learners acquire the knowledge and skills needed to promote sustainable development and sustainable lifestyles, human rights, gender equality, promotion of a culture of peace and non‐violence, global citizenship and appreciation of cultural diversity and of culture's contribution to sustainable development” (UNESCO 2021a). Education, however, is not restricted to its own goal, but is an enabler for all other goals through empowering “people with the knowledge, skills and values to live in dignity, build their lives and contribute to their societies' (UNESCO 2021b).

      However,