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Much has been written about sustainability in higher education, from the late 1980s when the concept of sustainable development was first discussed in-depth,to the 1990s with an emphasis on curriculum greening, and the period 2000–2012, with an emphasis on sustainability research. But despite the progress achieved over the years, and the plethora of publications on sustainable
development produced to date, there are still many conceptual and practical gaps which need to be met. One of them is the need to map trends and good practice in higher
education, and the ever-present need to document and disseminate them.
The book ‘‘Sustainability Assessment Tools in Higher Education—Mapping Trends and Good Practices at Universities round the World’’ is an attempt to fill in this gap. The aim of this book is to provide a contribution to the state of the art about current sustainability practices, with a focus on assessment
tools, being used or applied in higher education institutions.
The first chapters discuss issues of sustainability in higher education,
namely the role of universities in promoting sustainability and the emergent
fields of sustainability science and education for sustainable development and how to integrate, motivate and consider time for education for sustainability into the
universities. The subsequent chapters present several international examples of
sustainability assessment tools specifically developed for higher education institutions,
such as the AISHE—Auditing Instrument for Sustainability in Higher Education, the GASU—Graphical Assessment of Sustainability in Universities tool, and the STAUNCH—Sustainability Tool for Auditing Universities
Curricula in Higher Education. The use of other integrated tools are also presented to a lesser and to a greater extent.
All along, the papers have adopted a pragmatic approach, characterised by
conceptual descriptions, including sustainability assessment and reorienting the
curricula, on the one hand, and practical experiences on the other, with good
practices from different edges of the world.
As the UN Decade on Education for Sustainable Development (2005–2014) is coming to an end in 2014, this book provides a concrete contribution towards showing how sustainable development principles may be implemented in
practice, and the sort of action that is needed in the coming decades. This
publication is
therefore forward-looking and pace setting, since it outlines some areas where
action is and will be needed, for many years to come.
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Springer International Publishing