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Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The Copernicus Declaration of 1994, which was understood as a commitment to sustainable
development (SD) by top management in higher education, was signed by many universities.
This signature worked as an important driver for these institutions to put different dimensions of SD
principles into practice. In Portugal, a Southern European country, six of the fourteen universities
belonging to the Portuguese University Rectors Council signed the declaration, but no attempt has
been made to evaluate how these public universities integrated education for sustainable development
at policy and strategy levels. This paper presents the results of a study aimed at identifying to what
extent the integration of sustainability in the fourteen universities was achieved, through their own
strategic and activity plans and activity and sustainability reports. A detailed content analysis was
conducted on these plans and reports within the period from 2005 to 2014 (the time frame of the
United Nations Decade of Education for Sustainable Development), to identify the main commitments
and practices. Notwithstanding a lack of national integrated strategies or policies related to education
for SD, the results show that the movement made progress at the university level, with good examples
and initiatives at several universities. This paper highlights the importance of analyzing the content
of plans and reports from higher education institutions (HEIs) when intending to assess and define a
country profile for the implementation of sustainability in the educational sector. In addition, this
research, conducted in Portugal, may be helpful to understand and value how SD is being applied in
the policies and strategies of other European HEIs, as well as to share and encourage best practices
and ways of improvement.
Description
Keywords
Commitments Education for sustainable development Portuguese Practices Sustainability reports Universities