Publication | Closed Access
The future we want
645
Citations
15
References
2015
Year
Development Studies (Infrastructure Engineering)EngineeringSustainable DevelopmentEducationSustainable FutureSustainable ProcessesResource SustainabilitySustainable DesignForesightUnited NationsFuture EducationSustainable CitiesFuture ScenarioSustainable Development GoalSustainable SystemsHigher EducationHumanitiesSustaining EducationBusiness SustainabilitySocial FoundationsSustainabilityGlobal Sustainability
The paper describes the UN Decade of Education for Sustainable Development’s achievements in higher education and outlines key issues guiding future sustainable development, emphasizing universities’ role. The authors analyze past developments and the journal’s emphasis, cross‑reference UN 2012 deliberations, and conclude with suggestions for industrialised and developing countries to implement sustainable development principles. Sustainable development remains a major international concern, with substantial progress over 20 years but persistent gaps, and the paper offers suggestions for countries and insights into universities’ role to advance it.
Purpose – This paper aims to provide a description of the achievements of the United Nations (UN) Decade of Education for Sustainable Development (2005-2014) with a focus on higher education, and it describes some of the key issues which will guide sustainable development in the coming years. Design/methodology/approach – The paper initially presents an analysis of past developments, complemented by an assessment of the emphasis on sustainable development by the International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education . In particular, it makes cross-references to the deliberations held at the UN Conference on Sustainable Development held in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in June 2012, with a special emphasis to the document “The Future we Want”. It concludes by listing a set of suggestions and measures that both industrialised and developing countries may consider to translate the principles of sustainable development into reality. Findings – Sustainable development is and will continue to be a matter of substantial international interest and concern. The developments achieved over the past 20 years have been substantial, but there are still many gaps and need which need to be met, so as to improve its prospects in the next two decades. Originality/value – The paper provides useful insights which allow a better understanding of the role of universities in fostering sustainable development, and some of the key issues need to be considered, so as to allow things to move in the right direction.
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