Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1745397 Journal of Cleaner Production 2013 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

Since Agenda 21 and the United Nations' Decade for Education for Sustainable Development published, higher education institutions have been recognized as playing a critical role in shifting our society's awareness toward sustainable development. The aim of the present study was to investigate the degree to which universities in Australia have committed to declarations on sustainability by incorporating goals for sustainable development in their vision, mission and graduate attribute statements. Content analysis using QSR NVivo 9 software was used to examine the public websites of Australia's 39 universities. In particular, the research examined whether keywords related to higher education for sustainable development were espoused in vision, mission and graduate attribute statements at the university-level and business faculty/school-level of the organization. The research identified that while many Australian universities publicly endorsed goals and values related to sustainability, the commitment was not reflected in the vision, mission and graduate attributes of business faculties/schools within the same institution. It is argued that if a commitment to higher education for sustainable development is not (at least) endorsed as a publicly espoused value at multiple levels of a university, then the organization's commitment to ensuring sustainable development is enacted at strategic and operational levels of the organization may be questioned. The exploratory study provides a foundation for future research to examine good practice models of how organizations embed sustainable development in the policy-to-practice nexus in higher education.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Renewable Energy, Sustainability and the Environment
Authors
, , ,