From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency

Thousands of universities have made climate emergency declarations; however the higher education sector is not rising to the collective challenge with the urgency commensurate with scientific warnings. Universities are promoting an increased focus on sustainability through their research, teaching a...

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Main Authors: Charlie J. Gardner, Aaron Thierry, William Rowlandson, Julia K. Steinberger
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2021-05-01
Series:Frontiers in Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.679019/full
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spelling doaj-13845f38e90b4fd8be0d4a02cf12c3892021-05-31T07:19:53ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Sustainability2673-45242021-05-01210.3389/frsus.2021.679019679019From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological EmergencyCharlie J. Gardner0Aaron Thierry1William Rowlandson2Julia K. Steinberger3Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology, University of Kent, Canterbury, United KingdomCardiff School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University, Cardiff, United KingdomDivision of Arts and Humanities, University of Kent, Canterbury, United KingdomFaculté de Géosciences et de l'environnement, Université de Lausanne, Lausanne, SwitzerlandThousands of universities have made climate emergency declarations; however the higher education sector is not rising to the collective challenge with the urgency commensurate with scientific warnings. Universities are promoting an increased focus on sustainability through their research, teaching and their own institutional footprints. However, we suggest that such initiatives will be insufficient to catalyse the required transformations in our societies and economies because of (i) the time lags inherent in education and research pathways to impact, and (ii) their failure to address either real-world political processes or the forces invested in maintaining the status quo. We therefore suggest that academics should move from publications to public actions and engage in advocacy and activism to affect urgent and transformational change. We discuss the barriers to engagement in advocacy that academics face, and propose a number of actions that universities should adopt to help overcome them. These include explicitly recognising advocacy as part of the work mandate of academic staff by altering work allocation models, facilitating engaged research sabbaticals, altering hiring and promotion policies, and providing training to enhance the effectiveness of engagement. In addition, universities must defend the right of academics to engage in protest and push back against emerging threats to academic freedom. Such actions would strengthen a rich tradition of academic protest and enhance the contribution of universities to the public good in areas well beyond sustainability, for example race and social justice (Black Lives Matter, decolonising education) and public health.https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.679019/fullclimate changedirect actionhigher educationnon-violent civil disobedienceprotestpublic engagement
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Charlie J. Gardner
Aaron Thierry
William Rowlandson
Julia K. Steinberger
spellingShingle Charlie J. Gardner
Aaron Thierry
William Rowlandson
Julia K. Steinberger
From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency
Frontiers in Sustainability
climate change
direct action
higher education
non-violent civil disobedience
protest
public engagement
author_facet Charlie J. Gardner
Aaron Thierry
William Rowlandson
Julia K. Steinberger
author_sort Charlie J. Gardner
title From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency
title_short From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency
title_full From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency
title_fullStr From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency
title_full_unstemmed From Publications to Public Actions: The Role of Universities in Facilitating Academic Advocacy and Activism in the Climate and Ecological Emergency
title_sort from publications to public actions: the role of universities in facilitating academic advocacy and activism in the climate and ecological emergency
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Sustainability
issn 2673-4524
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Thousands of universities have made climate emergency declarations; however the higher education sector is not rising to the collective challenge with the urgency commensurate with scientific warnings. Universities are promoting an increased focus on sustainability through their research, teaching and their own institutional footprints. However, we suggest that such initiatives will be insufficient to catalyse the required transformations in our societies and economies because of (i) the time lags inherent in education and research pathways to impact, and (ii) their failure to address either real-world political processes or the forces invested in maintaining the status quo. We therefore suggest that academics should move from publications to public actions and engage in advocacy and activism to affect urgent and transformational change. We discuss the barriers to engagement in advocacy that academics face, and propose a number of actions that universities should adopt to help overcome them. These include explicitly recognising advocacy as part of the work mandate of academic staff by altering work allocation models, facilitating engaged research sabbaticals, altering hiring and promotion policies, and providing training to enhance the effectiveness of engagement. In addition, universities must defend the right of academics to engage in protest and push back against emerging threats to academic freedom. Such actions would strengthen a rich tradition of academic protest and enhance the contribution of universities to the public good in areas well beyond sustainability, for example race and social justice (Black Lives Matter, decolonising education) and public health.
topic climate change
direct action
higher education
non-violent civil disobedience
protest
public engagement
url https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/frsus.2021.679019/full
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