Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/2440/87645
Type: Journal article
Title: Ecoversity: towards a sustainable future
Author: Matthews, J.
Garlick, S.
Smith, T.
Citation: Journal of the World Universities Forum, 2009; 2(3):113-124
Publisher: Common Ground Publishing
Issue Date: 2009
ISSN: 1835-2030
Statement of
Responsibility: 
Julie Matthews, Steve Garlick and Timothy F. Smith
Abstract: For decades scientists, environmentalists and social scientists have been pointing to a crisis of sustainability. They have been detailing and debating evidence of the impact of resource depletion, species extinction, deforestation, warming oceans, changing seasons and melting ice caps. However, it was not until the late twentieth century that governments and political leaders came to see that no issue of politics, economics or society or policy would be unaffected by the sustainability crisis because, as David Orr observes, sustainability is ‘about the terms and conditions of human survival’. Problematically however, ‘we still educate at all levels as if no such crisis existed’ (Orr 1992, 83). We argue that universities need to step up to the task of education for a sustainable future and play a leading role in generating critical debate and innovative action. Until recently, modern universities were largely self organising institutions embodying a unique set of paradoxes and contradictions, many of which confounded normative understandings of organizational structure (Marginson & Considine 2000). It is the unique structure and relative institutional independence of universities that we suggest offer important possibilities for leading the way towards sustainable futures. The role of universities in servicing the professional and ideological functions of emergent 18th century European nation states was moderated by awkward compacts and informed by a synthesis of old and new traditions, international culture and unique forms of authority. While contemporary managerial, marketing and entrepreneurial directions in universities raise cause for concern, we argue that universities remain in a unique position to locate themselves at the hub of social change debates and solutions. Universities should have a ‘larger purpose, a larger sense of mission, a larger clarity of direction in the national life’ (Boyer 1996, 20). An important element of creating an environment of on-going critical discourse around sustainability issues in universities is the combination of science and civics through a process of ‘bounded conflict’ or social learning (Milbrath, 1979; Lee, 1993; Smith and Smith, 2006). This paper argues that ‘ecoversity’ is an important concept for universities. It underlines the contemporary climate of global urgency relating to unsustainable development, ecological illiteracy, global technocracy and civil insecurity and the role of universities in generating critical debate and innovative solutions to complex issues. An ‘ecoversity’ approach may thus serve as a future manifesto for higher education; a proposal and a provocation to action that draws resources from what we have already anticipated and hoped for education. In short, an ecoversity approach demonstrates the importance of universities’ critical and scholarly role in both research scholarship for the greater good, and the professional education of future generations.
Keywords: Sustainablity; Ecoversity; Futures
Rights: As well as content developed by Journal of the World Universities Forum, the various creators and contributors involved in publishing through this website are the copyright owners. They, and the publisher, Journal of the World Universities Forum, ask that you respect their copyright.
Published version: http://wuj.cgpublisher.com/product/pub.173/prod.156
Appears in Collections:Aurora harvest 2
Education publications

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