Sunday, May 3, 2015

UN Agenda 21 on Campus

Executive Summary — Sustainability: Higher Education’s New Fundamentalism, Posted on May 2, 2015 Written by nas.org
“Sus­tain­abil­ity” is a key idea on col­lege cam­puses in the United States and the rest of the West­ern world. To the unsus­pect­ing, sus­tain­abil­ity is just a new name for envi­ron­men­tal­ism. But the word really marks out a new and larger ide­o­log­i­cal ter­ri­tory in which cur­tail­ing eco­nomic, polit­i­cal, and intel­lec­tual lib­erty is the price that must be paid now to ensure the wel­fare of future generations.
This report is the first in-depth crit­i­cal study of the sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment in higher edu­ca­tion. The move­ment, of course, extends well beyond the col­lege cam­pus. It affects party pol­i­tics, gov­ern­ment bureau­cracy, the energy indus­try, Hol­ly­wood, schools, and con­sumers. But the col­lege cam­pus is where the move­ment gets its voice of author­ity, and where it molds the views and com­mands the atten­tion of young people.
While we take no posi­tion in the cli­mate change debate, we focus in this study on how the sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment has dis­torted higher edu­ca­tion. We exam­ine the harm it has done to col­lege cur­ric­ula and the lim­its it has imposed on the free­dom of stu­dents to inquire and to make their own deci­sions. Our report also offers an anatomy of the cam­pus sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment in the United States. We explain how it came to promi­nence and how it is organized.
We also exam­ine the finan­cial costs to col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties in their efforts to achieve some of the movement’s goals. Often the move­ment presents its pro­gram as sav­ing these insti­tu­tions money. But we have found that Amer­i­can col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties cur­rently spend more than $3.4 bil­lion per year pur­su­ing their dreams of “sus­tain­abil­ity” at a time when col­lege tuitions are soar­ing and 7.5 per­cent of recent col­lege grad­u­ates are unem­ployed and another 46 per­cent underemployed.[1] In addi­tion to the direct costs of the move­ment, we exam­ine the grow­ing demands by sus­tain­abil­ity advo­cates that col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties divest their hold­ings in carbon-based energy com­pa­nies with­out regard to for­gone income or growth in their endow­ments. What makes “sus­tain­abil­ity” so impor­tant that insti­tu­tions fac­ing finan­cial dis­tress are will­ing to pri­or­i­tize spend­ing on it? In this report, we exam­ine that question.
Because the idea of “anthro­pogenic global warming”—or “cli­mate change”—is so closely inter­wo­ven with the sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment, we devote a chap­ter early in the report to lay­ing out the argu­ments on both sides of this debate. The appeal of the sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment depends to a great extent on the belief that the world is expe­ri­enc­ing cat­a­strophic warm­ing as a result of human activ­i­ties that are increas­ing the amount of car­bon diox­ide in the atmosphere.
Is this belief war­ranted? We are neu­tral on this propo­si­tion, but we stand by the prin­ci­ple that all impor­tant ideas ought to be open to rea­soned debate and care­ful exam­i­na­tion of the evi­dence. This puts us and oth­ers at odds with many in the sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment whose declared posi­tion is that the time for debate is over and that those who per­sist in rais­ing basic ques­tions are “cli­mate deniers.” The “debate-is-over” posi­tion is itself at odds with intel­lec­tual free­dom and is why the cam­pus sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment should be exam­ined skeptically.
We sup­port good stew­ard­ship of nat­ural resources, but we see in the sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment a hard­en­ing of irra­tional demands to sus­pend free inquiry in favor of unproven the­o­ries of immi­nent cat­a­stro­phe. And we see, under the aegis of sus­tain­abil­ity, a move­ment that often takes its bear­ings from its hos­til­ity towards mate­r­ial pros­per­ity, con­sumerism, free mar­kets, and even demo­c­ra­tic self-government.
We offer ten rec­om­men­da­tions under three categories:
RESPECT INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM
1. Cre­ate neu­tral ground. Col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties should be neu­tral in impor­tant and unre­solved sci­en­tific debates, such as the debate over dan­ger­ous anthro­pogenic global warm­ing. Claims made on the author­ity of “sci­ence” must be made on the basis of trans­par­ent evi­dence and open­ness to good argu­ments regard­less of their source.
2. Cut the apoc­a­lyp­tic rhetoric. Pre­sent­ing stu­dents with a steady diet of dooms­day sce­nar­ios under­mines lib­eral education.
3. Main­tain civil­ity. Some stu­dent sus­tain­abil­ity protests have aimed at pre­vent­ing oppo­nents from speaking.
4. Stop “nudg­ing.” Leave stu­dents the space to make their own deci­sions about sus­tain­abil­ity, and free fac­ulty mem­bers from the implied pres­sure to imbed sus­tain­abil­ity into the cur­ric­ula of unre­lated courses.
UPHOLD INSTITUTIONAL INTEGRITY
5. With­draw from the ACUPCC. Col­leges that have signed the Amer­i­can Col­lege and Uni­ver­sity Pres­i­dents’ Cli­mate Com­mit­ment should with­draw in favor of open-minded debate on the subject.
6. Open the books and pull back the sus­tain­abil­ity hires. Make the pur­suit of sus­tain­abil­ity by col­leges finan­cially trans­par­ent. The growth of admin­is­tra­tive and staff posi­tions in sus­tain­abil­ity dri­ves up costs and wrongly insti­tu­tion­al­izes advo­cacy at the expense of education.
7. Uphold envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship. Cam­puses need to recover the dis­tinc­tion between real envi­ron­men­tal stew­ard­ship and a move­ment that uses the term as a spring­board for a much broader agenda.
8. Cre­den­tial wisely. Cur­tail the aggran­dize­ment of sus­tain­abil­ity as a sub­ject. Sus­tain­abil­ity is not a dis­ci­pline or even a sub­ject area. It is an ideology.
BE EVEN-HANDED
9. Equal­ize treat­ment for advo­cates. Treat sus­tain­abil­ity groups on cam­pus under the same rubric as other advo­cacy groups. They should not enjoy priv­i­leged immu­nity from ordi­nary rules and spe­cial access to insti­tu­tional resources.
10. Exam­ine motives. Col­lege and uni­ver­sity boards of trustees should exam­ine demands for divest­ment from fos­sil fuels skep­ti­cally and with full aware­ness of the ide­o­log­i­cal con­text in which these demands are made.
The sus­tain­abil­ity move­ment has become a major force in Amer­i­can life that has largely escaped seri­ous crit­i­cal scrutiny. The goal of this report is to change that by exam­in­ing for the first time the movement’s ide­o­log­i­cal, eco­nomic, and prac­ti­cal effects on insti­tu­tions of higher edu­ca­tion.
[1] The basis of the $3.4 bil­lion esti­mate is given in Chap­ter 5 of this report. For the unem­ploy­ment rate see:
Heidi Shier­holz, Alyssa Davis, and Will Kim­ball, “The Class of 2014: The Weak Econ­omy Is Idling Too Many Young Grad­u­ates,” Eco­nomic Pol­icy Insti­tute, EPI Brief­ing Paper #377, May 1, 2014. The Shier­holz study uses the term “under­em­ployed” to mean “work­ing part-time” and cal­cu­lates that 16.8 per­cent of recent col­lege grad­u­ates fit that descrip­tion. The more com­mon def­i­n­i­tion of “under­em­ployed” is “work­ing in jobs that gen­er­ally don’t require one to have a col­lege degree.” By that def­i­n­i­tion, 46 per­cent of recent col­lege grad­u­ates are under­em­ployed. See also Cather­ine Dunn, “Are Col­lege Grads Des­tined For Jobs As Baris­tas And Clerks? Fed­eral Reserve Econ­o­mists Explain,” Inter­na­tional Busi­ness Times, Sep­tem­ber 4, 2014. http://www.ibtimes.com/are-college-grads-destined-jobs-baristas-clerks-federal-reserve-economists-explain-1679120
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