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Dr.
Ron Smith
Dr
Ron Smith is Co-Director of International Relations and Security
Studies at the University of Waikato, where he has been in one
capacity or another for thirty years. He has a particular
interest in nuclear policy and, more generally, in energy and
security issues. Tertiary qualifications in both Chemistry and
Philosophy also underpin an interest in the interface between
science and society.
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NZCPR
Guest Forum
Sustainability
and the role of the university
Ron
Smith
12
August 2012
It
appears from my local paper that, along with Unitech, the
University of Waikato has formally committed itself to the
United Nations Higher Education Sustainability Initiative,
which was part of the much-reported June, Rio + 20, process.
This is to be regretted. The decision appears to have
been taken without much consultation, or any reflection on
what the implications might be for teaching and learning and
for the role of the university in society. It is more
than a mere vacuous declaration of virtue. It is yet
another assault on the whole notion of the university as a
centre for critical thought, and as a source of contestable
advice on public issues.
The
Vice-Chancellor’s signature on this declaration commits the
University to teach ‘sustainable development concepts’ (so
that future graduates) ‘have an explicit understanding of
how to achieve a society that values people, the planet and
profits in a manner that respects the finite resource
boundaries of the earth’. In a recent blog (‘Hard
questions about nuclear weapons’) I commented on the extent
to which discussion on important issues is closed down by
official policy settings and by the political prejudices of
those who control the process. This is yet another
example.
The
whole thesis that there is a ‘sustainability’ crisis and
that it requires urgent global attention, depends on a
substructure of belief in such things as global warming,
irreplaceable resource depletion ‘footprints’, and
gathering problems of poverty and disease. All of these
are, to a greater or lesser extent, disputable, and ought to
be disputed, if unnecessary and counter-productive action is
to be avoided. For a university to institutionally
prejudge these things is an offence to scholarship and a
serious disservice to the community on whose support they
depend. Whether the University leadership knows it or
not, it has now made itself part of a global political
campaign, which goes beyond the promotion of a persistent
‘narrative’ (don’t you just love that word!) that human
beings are destroying the planet, to the advocacy of a
world-order which has the potential to radically alter the
social and political rights of New Zealanders.
The
fear that humanity faces calamity, as crucial resources run
out, is an old one. More than 150 years ago, the focus
was on coal, which was then crucial to the industrial
revolution. Around a hundred years ago, the problem was
hay for the horses on which transportation depended.
Fifty years back, takes us to the crisis of ‘peak oil’
(more recently undermined by the discovery of enormous
workable shale deposits). This year it was the scarcity
of ‘rare earths’ that was to be our undoing.
Contrary
to the fears expressed in the 1950s, we are feeding more
people than ever before. A recent World Bank study also
shows that there has been a sharp reduction in global poverty.
And then there is anthropogenic global warming; now
re-christened ‘climate change’. As far as this is
concerned, the record appears to show that temperatures fell
over the period 1940-80, giving rise to fears of a repeat of
the mini ice-age of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
This was then followed by a period of rising temperatures,
during which the Rio-process, with all its attendant political
responses (such as carbon-charges), got underway. We are
now in a cooling period. Here, too, it looks as if it
would be prudent to keep our options open, as to what is going
to happen and what we will need to do about it.
The
point is not that we should not take these
possible/potential problems seriously. It is that we
should not close down discussion upon them and pre-judge their
outcome. As a society, we stand a chance of damaging our
interests if we do so. For a university to do this is
simply a disgrace. There is too much in the system
already that means that post-graduate candidates proposing to
undertake disfavoured lines of inquiry are less likely to
obtain financial support, or even have their enrolment refused
altogether.
There
is a broader moral here. The ‘science’ is never
settled and the history of humanity suggests that human
ingenuity is almost limitless. We need to make sure that
we do not cut ourselves off from this potential.
Governments need to make sure that their options are not
constrained by a self-perpetuating bureaucracy and a halo
of self-serving advisors. They also need to make sure
that they get the best out of their universities by ensuring
that they function effectively as ‘critic and conscience’
of society, as required by the 1989 Education Act. For
this, the emphasis must return to support for open-ended
research and institutional respect for academic freedom.
It must retreat from the entirely misplaced notion that the
value of such research can be evaluated, at the time that it
is going on, by earnest committees of other academics, which
can only have the effect of increasing the power of those in
authority to impose their will and increase corruption in the
system overall, as recent events, recognised by the Tertiary
Education Commission, have revealed (widespread ‘gaming’
by university administrations of the performance based
research funding system). It is just another part of our
higher education arrangements, which are really not working
well. This is the real ‘sustainability’ problem.
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