4.7 Article

Maturation of sustainability in engineering faculties - From emerging issue to strategy?

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLEANER PRODUCTION
Volume 172, Issue -, Pages 4277-4285

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2017.07.143

Keywords

Sustainability; Higher education; Social issue maturation; Organizational change; Engineering

Funding

  1. Bulgarian National Science Fund [1.B.202.15F]

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Although higher Education Institutions (HEls) have seen a blossoming of sustainability initiatives of various kinds in recent years, the variety of institutional and socio-economic contexts brings about an equally plural interpretation and implementation of these sustainability change processes. This study focuses on the organizational change processes in six different universities across five countries (Belgium, Chile, Finland, Sweden & the United States of America), by way of a qualitative analysis of in-depth expert interviews. We apply the social issue maturation framework to identify, describe and assess patterns of change across HEls, with a focus on engineering schools as the inherent inter-disciplinarity of engineering provides a promising entry point for sustainability reflection and action. Our findings indicate that sustainability processes often begin as ad hoc processes which grow and mature over time as a range of different actors join in. The commitment of a small team of 'sustainability champions' is a key factor for success, as is at least a tacit support from the institution's hierarchy. Sustainability in HEls is increasingly connected with sustainability in the private sector and with other public actors. Moreover there is a growing acknowledgement of the interactions between society, industry and academic engineering programs and projects. Ideally, sustainability change processes are gradually up -scaled from isolated efforts to coordinated actions, involving both academic and non-academic actors within and outside the institution. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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