ABSTRACT

The ‘Key Issues in Higher Education’ series aims to raise both awareness and the
standards of debate on the fundamental issues that lie at the very heart of higher
education and intends to assist national and international debate.

Higher Education and Sustainable Development examines whether it is actually possible to mandate, plan, monitor and evaluate the higher education sector’s route to the production of educated, innovative, independent, self-determining, critical individuals while at the same time achieving a range of wider policy goals on the side. This book examines this question in the context of a particular international policy issue –
sustainable development – which is now seen across the globe as a necessary and
urgent response to a range of social and environmental issues that threaten the
integrity of the biosphere and human well being. The book concludes that the idea of sustainable development holds both opportunities and dangers for universities as they pursue their proper role in a free society.

Illustrated by seven in-depth case studies this book considers the complex
inter-relationships of a free society and sustainable development in the context of higher education, and aims to makes recommendations for realistic future
development. It is essential reading for the international higher education research community, policy-makers, university managers, students and non-Governmental organizations in the development, environment and social policy sectors.

chapter |7 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|5 pages

What is higher education for?

chapter 3|9 pages

Sustaining development

chapter 11|8 pages

The case studies: Clarity and confusion

chapter 15|9 pages

Individual learning in higher education

chapter 16|11 pages

Collective learning in higher education

chapter 17|8 pages

Linking learning and research

chapter 19|7 pages

Managing change

chapter 20|11 pages

Managing across the organisational boundary