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Responsibility, opportunity, and vision for higher education in urban and regional carbon management

Abstract

This is a summary of the conversation among scholars attending the special session on "Responsibility, Opportunity, and Vision for Higher Education in Urban and Regional Carbon Management" at the First International Conference on Carbon Management at Urban and Regional Levels: Connecting Development Decisions to Global Issues in Mexico City Sept. 4–8, 2006. It includes The Declaration for Carbon Management Education, agreed upon by the participants. Obstacles to such a vision were discussed along with exemplar models of transdisciplinary curricula and suggestions for scholarship.

Introduction

The third theme of the Science Framework of the Global Carbon Project is Carbon Management [1]. At the GCP's first conference dedicated to the topic, Carbon Management at Urban and Regional Levels: Connecting Development Decisions to Global Issues in Mexico City Sept. 4–8, 2006, educators and students met at a Special Afternoon Session for Higher Education. This session was framed as a discussion on "Responsibility, Opportunity, and Vision for Higher Education in Urban and Regional Carbon Management." Its goals were to "explore Earth System Science course content and our own programmatic challenges/weaknesses/strengths and then to move on to envisioning innovations such as inter-collegiate team taught virtual seminars, visitor training exchanges for graduate students, and opportunities for collaborative hands-on projects in carbon science and management" [2].

Discussion

In 2001, the scientific communities of four international global change research programs – the International Geosphere-Biosphere Programme (IGBP), the International Human Dimensions Programme on Global Environmental Change (IHDP), the World Climate Research Programme (WCRP) and the international biodiversity program DIVERSITAS – concluded that, in addition to the threat of significant climate change,

...there is growing concern over the ever-increasing human modification of other aspects of the global environment and the consequent implications for human well-being. Basic goods and services supplied by the planetary life support system, such as food, water, clean air and an environment conducive to human health, are being affected increasingly by global change [3].

The challenge of the Amsterdam declaration of 2001

Accordingly, the four programs called for an "ethical framework for global stewardship and strategies for Earth System management... that sustain the Earth's environment while meeting social and economic development objectives" [3]. Furthermore, they urged embarking on a new system of global environmental science, an Earth Systems Science, which would

  • draw strongly on the existing and expanding disciplinary base of global change science;

  • integrate across disciplines, environment and development issues and the natural and social sciences;

  • collaborate across national boundaries on the basis of shared and secure infrastructure;

  • intensify efforts to enable the full involvement of developing country scientists; and

  • employ the complementary strengths of nations and regions to build an efficient international system of global environmental science.

The session at the Mexico City conference was initiated in response to the challenge of the Amsterdam Declaration.

Report from the special afternoon session for higher education in urban and regional carbon management

The president of Oklahoma State University USA, Dr. David Schmidly, began the afternoon by outlining the challenge of education in sustainability for research universities [4]. The following discussion revealed that the participants represented a wide variety of disciplinary perspectives and levels of institutional support for education relevant to carbon management. Furthermore, the participants stressed the importance of practical teamwork as a model for the kind of transdisciplinary curricular innovation that is required for carbon management education (Table 1).

Table 1 Summary of Discussion Topics and Suggestions for Curricular Innovations for Carbon Management in Higher Education

Based on this conversation, the participants committed themselves to mutual support and communication, enlarging the nascent network of educators, connecting with other similar networks, and pushing for institutional changes to further such goals. The resulting position statement was adopted as the Mexico City Declaration on Carbon Management Education (Table 2). The signatories are listed in Table 3.

Table 2 Mexico City Declaration on Carbon Management Education
Table 3 Signatories to the Mexico City Declaration on Carbon Management Education

An illustration of a three-year integrated, case-study based program in the social sciences is presented in Figure 1, taken from a GCP proposal for five post doctoral students from the Asia and Pacific region [5]. The organizing principle is the management challenge of finding locally appropriate levers for carbon management, given the configuration of population, (social) organization, eco-environment, technology, institutions, and culture (POETICs) in each fellow's urban or regional management case study [6].

Figure 1
figure 1

Schematic of the Proposed Science Leadership Program, Urban and Regional Carbon Management, Global Carbon Project, NIES, Tsukuba, Japan, August 2005.

Conclusion

While we are only at the very beginning of contemplating graduate education in carbon management at research universities and scientific institutes, leaders in higher education understand that their commitment to the project is an important first step. The small network begun in at the Mexico City conference has pledged to create concrete next steps. Some of these await the organization of coordinated case studies, programmatic development, and curricular design. We urge our colleagues to join us as we go forward. We also hope that colleagues will use this journal to present ideas for interdisciplinary carbon balance education.

References

  1. Global Carbon Project: Science framework and Implementation. In Earth System Science Partnership (IGBP, IHDP, WCRP, DIVERSITAS) Report No. 1; Global Carbon Project Report No. 1. Canberra Edited by: Canadell JG, Dickinson R, Hibbard K, Raupach M, Young O. 2003, 69.

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  2. Canan P: An open letter to colleagues and friends regarding an URCM Higher Education Network. email memo: May 2005

  3. Amsterdam Declaration on Global Change 2001[http://www.sciconf.igbp.kva.se/fr.html]

  4. Schmidly DJ, Talkington J: Landscapes, Global Environmental Issues and Sustainability: The Role of Research Universities. A presentation at the First International Conference on Carbon Management at Urban and Regional Levels: Connecting Development Decisions to Global Issues in Mexico City Sept. 4–8 2006

  5. Global Carbon Project: Proposed Science Leadership Program, Urban and Regional Carbon Management. Submitted to NIES, Tsukuba, Japan, August 2005

  6. Scholz , Stephan : The POETICs of industrial carbon dioxide emissions in Japan: an urban and institutional extension of the IPAT identity. Carbon Balance and Management 2006, 1: 11. 10.1186/1750-0680-1-11

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Correspondence to Penelope Canan.

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Penelope Canan serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Carbon Balance and Management.

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Canan, P., Schienke, E.W. Responsibility, opportunity, and vision for higher education in urban and regional carbon management. Carbon Balance Manage 1, 13 (2006). https://doi.org/10.1186/1750-0680-1-13

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