Emerald Login
   

Welcome guest



Article Request:
An international comparative analysis of sustainability transformation across seven universities


Article Information:

Title:

An international comparative analysis of sustainability transformation across seven universities

Author(s):

D. Ferrer-Balas, J. Adachi, S. Banas, C.I. Davidson, A. Hoshikoshi, A. Mishra, Y. Motodoa, M. Onga, M. Ostwald

Journal:

International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education

Year:

2008

Volume:

9

Issue:

3

Page:

295 - 316


ISSN:

1467-6370


DOI:

10.1108/14676370810885907

Publisher:

Emerald Group Publishing Limited


Acknowledgements:

This study has been made possible thanks to the Going Global project carried out by MIT with the support of the Knut and Alice Wallenberg Foundation. The authors would also like to acknowledge the team from MIT, especially Amanda Graham.

Document Access:

Existing customers:

Please login above.

Purchase this document:
Price payable: GBP £13.00
plus handling charge of GBP £1.50 and VAT where applicable.
Purchase

Request this document:
Print or e-mail a document request to your librarian.
Request

Reprints & permissions:
Image: Rightslink Request

Abstract:

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to identify the key aspects of transformation of universities towards sustainability, such as the ideal characteristics of the “sustainable university”, and the drivers and barriers in the transformation, by comparing the strategies of seven universities world-wide.

Design/methodology/approach – A systems transformation analysis of seven case studies has been applied through a self-evaluation based on the tridimensional Framework-Level-Actors (FLA) method.

Findings – The study shows that none of the three dimensions of change is predominant over the others. The main barrier to be overcome is the lack of incentive structure for promoting changes at the individual level. The main drivers for change are the presence of “connectors” with society, the existence of coordination bodies and projects, and the availability of funding, all of which are important for progress. Enhancing interdisciplinarity is a strategic objective at almost all of these universities, while transformative learning is less present. A common characteristic for most of the institutions is establishing and supporting networks of expertise within the universities. These universities show important strategic efforts and initiatives that drive and nucleate change for sustainable development, the result of a combination of drivers.

Practical implications – The FLA-method has proved useful for being used at the level of comparing case-studies through a bird's-eye perspective.

Originality/value – The paper demonstrates the application of a simple tool that gives a global perspective on transformational strategies used in seven cases world-wide in the search for commonalities and differences.

Keywords:

Discipline, Higher education, Sustainable development, Systems theory, Transformational leadership


Article Type:

Case study


Article URL:

http://www.emeraldinsight.com/10.1108/14676370810885907

Top