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International Journal of Sustainability in Higher Education | 2013

Exploring sustainability themes in engineering accreditation and curricula

Edmond P. Byrne; Cheryl Desha; John J. Fitzpatrick; Karlson Hargroves

Purpose This paper aims to present key findings from an inquiry into engineering accreditation and curricula renewal. The research attempted to ascertain conceptions of requisite sustainability themes among engineering academics and professionals. The paper also reflects on the potential role of professional engineering institutions (PEIs) in embedding sustainability through their programme accreditation guidelines and wider implications in terms of rapid curricula renewal. Design/methodology/approach This research comprised an International Engineering Academic Workshop held during the 2010 International Symposium on Engineering Education in Ireland, on “accreditation and sustainable engineering”. This built on the findings of a literature review that was distributed prior to the workshop. Data collection included individual questionnaires administered during the workshop, and notes scribed by workshop participants. Findings The literature review highlighted a wide range of perspectives across and within engineering disciplines, regarding what sustainability/sustainable development (SD) themes should be incorporated into engineering curricula, and regarding language and terminology. This was also reflected in the workshop discussions. Notwithstanding this diversity, clusters of sustainability themes and priority considerations were distilled from the literature review and workshop. These related to resources, technology, values, ethics, inter- and intra-generational equity, transdisciplinarity, and systems and complex thinking. Themes related to environmental and economic knowledge and skills received less attention by workshop participants than represented in the literature. Originality/value This paper provides an appreciation of the diversity of opinion regarding priority sustainability themes for engineering curricula, among a group of self-selected engineering academics who have a common interest in education for SD. It also provides some insights and caveats on how these themes might be rapidly integrated into engineering curricula.


Smart and Sustainable Built Environment | 2015

Biophilic urbanism: contributions to holistic urban greening for urban renewal

Angela Reeve; Cheryl Desha; Doug Hargreaves; Karlson Hargroves

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to consider how biophilic urbanism complements and potentially enhances approaches for the built environment profession to holistically integrate nature into cities. Urban nature – also referred to as urban greening and green infrastructure – has increasingly been considered from many perspectives to address challenges such as population pressures, climate change and resource shortages. Within this context, the authors highlight how “biophilic urbanism” complements and may enhance approaches and efforts for urban greening. Design/methodology/approach – The paper provides a review of existing literature in “urban nature” to clarify and discuss the concept of biophilic urbanism. Drawing on this literature review, the authors present a systematic clustering and scaling of “biophilic elements” that could facilitate responding to twenty-first century challenges. Findings – Biophilic urbanism can be applied at multiple scales in urban environments, through a range of multi...


Archive | 2016

Considering a Structural Adjustment Approach to the Low Carbon Transition

Karlson Hargroves

As the world comes to grips with the need to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions, a range of questions are being asked about how to effectively transition economies to low carbon operation over the coming decades. A growing number of pressures are now being felt across a range of sectors to reduce emissions, in particular carbon-related fuel consumption, which is leading to autonomous emissions reduction efforts—typically ad hoc and business-led. However, in order to meet ambitious targets for the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions now set by the world’s largest economies a structural adjustment approach may be needed that is effectively underpinned and appropriately expedited at an economy-wide level. This chapter presents an introduction to key lessons from structural adjustment programmes to inform the low carbon transition, and in the absence of conditional lending requirements that have driven structural adjustment programmes the chapter considers how the willingness to adjust structures of the economy to deliver low carbon outcomes can be increased.


Archive | 2010

Energy Transformed - Building Capacity in the Engineering Profession

Cheryl Desha; Karlson Hargroves

Global pressures of burgeoning population growth and consumption are threatening efforts to reduce negative environmental pressures associated with development such as atmospheric, land and water pollution. For example, the world’s population is now growing at over 70 million per year or 1 billion per decade (Brown, 2007), increasing from 3.5 billion in 1970, to 5 billion in 1990, to 7 billion by 2010 (United Nations, 2002). In 1990 only 13 percent of the global population lived in cities, while in 2007 more than half did. More than 60 percent of the global population lives within 100 kilometers of the coastline (World Resources Institute, 2005) and nearly all of the population growth hereon is forecast to happen in developing countries (Postel, 1999). Future levels of stress on the global environment are therefore likely to increase if current trends are used for forecasting, which is particularly challenging as scientists are already observing significant signs of degradation and failure in environmental systems. For example, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Report (IPCC, 2007) provided an nequivocal link between climate change and current human activities, in particular: the burning of fossil fuels; deforestation and land clearing; the use of synthetic greenhouse gases; and decomposition of wastes from landfill. The UK Stern Review concluded that within our lifetime there is between a 77 to 99 percent chance (depending on the climate model used) of the global average temperature rising by more than 2 degrees Celsius (Stern, 2006), with a likely greenhouse gas concentration in the atmosphere of 550 parts per million (ppm) or more by around 2100.


Archive | 2006

Waste Streams to Value Streams

Karlson Hargroves; Michael Smith; Chris Page; Caroline Plunkett; Gerry Gillespie; Alexis Nelson

This important Handbook is the first comprehensive account that brings together recent developments in the three related fields of environmental technology, environmental management and technology management. With contributions from more than 55 outstanding authors representing ten countries and five continents, the reader is provided with a vast range of insightful perspectives on the latest industry and policy issues. With the aid of numerous case studies, leading experts reflect on significant changes in the use of technology and management practices witnessed in the last decade.


Archive | 2010

Cents and Sustainability: Securing Our Common Future by Decoupling Economic Growth from Environmental Pressures

Michael Smith; Karlson Hargroves; Cheryl Desha


Science & Engineering Faculty | 2011

Informing engineering education for sustainable development using a deliberative dynamic model for curriculum renewal

Cheryl Desha; Karlson Hargroves


ECOS | 2006

Innovation inspired by nature: Biomimicry

Karlson Hargroves; Michael Smith


City, culture and society | 2017

Planning support systems for smart cities

Christopher Pettit; Ashley Bakelmun; Scott N. Lieske; Stephen Glackin; Karlson Hargroves; Giles Thomson; Heather Shearer; Hussein Dia; Peter Newman


ECOS | 2007

Smart approaches to electricity use

Michael Smith; Karlson Hargroves

Collaboration


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Cheryl Desha

Queensland University of Technology

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Matthew Himley

Illinois State University

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Christopher Pettit

University of New South Wales

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Hussein Dia

University of Queensland

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Stephen Glackin

Swinburne University of Technology

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