Content area

Abstract

Issue Title: Sustainability science: bridging the gap between science and society

Sustainability challenges are multitudinous, urgent, and complex. They are beyond the capacities of our current institutions to address, caused by path-dependent behaviors, and require substantial change from systems with crippling inertia. These problems are born of large-scale industrial economic policy, the rise of materialism, and the supremacy of profit over sustainability. Currently, academia is poorly positioned to address sustainability problems because of anachronistic pedagogy, mismatched incentives, insufficient expertise, lack of personal commitment, and insular products and communication. What transformational methods for research and practice, which involve relevant communities throughout problem-solving processes in meaningful ways, does sustainability science offer? Though rhetoric outweighs real-world sustainability transitions so far, we argue that operationalizing the goals of the field, developing the necessary competencies, and seeking novel partnerships between society and the academy will position academic institutions to make a bigger impact on the transition to sustainability.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
How much time do we have? Urgency and rhetoric in sustainability science
Author
van der Leeuw, Sander; Wiek, Arnim; Harlow, John; Buizer, James
Pages
115-120
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Feb 2012
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
18624065
e-ISSN
18624057
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
921138800
Copyright
Springer 2012