University Sustainability and System Ontology
Aguirre, Grant; Boje, David M.; Cast, Melissa
L.; Conner, Suzanne L.; Helmuth, Catherine; Mittal, Rakesh; Saylors, Rohny; Tourani, Nazanin; Vendette, Sebastien; Yan, Tony Qiang
Draft of an article Published in International Journal of Organization Theory and Behavior,
Special Issue: Organizational Innovations and
Responses for Universal Equilibrium (Special-Theme Editor: Shiv K. Tripathi
The research history project had an NMSU IRB
approval
Abstract
This
intervention study outlines the continuing journey of a university towards its
sustainability potentiality. We introduce the importance of sustainable
development and link it to our intervention study of potentiality for
sustainability from a Heideggerian phenomenological perspective. Our major
contribution is that we find evidence that sustainability, entrepreneurship,
and ethics are rhizomatically assembled. Specifically, we find that in a
practical, strategy as practice, process sense: sustainability, ethics, and
entrepreneurship are unified not causally, but configurationally. We use the
term "sustainable-authentic-potentiality" to represent the unified
process of sustainability, entrepreneurship, and ethics.
Through
a case study of sustainability at New Mexico State University, we provide an
insight into the development of a new dimension for a university sustainability
interface. This interface exists in terms of a dialogic of sustainability, as it relates
to the balancing of competing needs, such as efficiency, heart, and brand
identity. An important aspect of this interface is intervention, highlighting
new possibilities for the top administrators regarding the universityÕs goals
and environmentalities.
A qualitative and
interpretive approach using ontological storytelling inquiry is employed. Data
for the study were collected through in-depth interviews with university
members from all hierarchical levels.From
this paperÕs perspective, sustainability is initiated and sustained through the
meaning of authentic care as participants in the process realize the sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
Specifically, colleges are one-by-one embracing sustainability in curriculum
and research. This article raises interesting ontological issues for
sustainability researchers, and has implications for strategy as practice.
Introduction
ÒSustainable
development has become an important issue on international, regional, and
national agendas concerning education policy over the past few yearsÓ (KalliomŠki, 2007: 14). At a global level of concern, the
United Nations Conference on the Human Environment, held in Stockholm in 1972,
made environmental sustainability an international political concern. The next
milestone, in 1987, was the UN World Commission on Environment and Development,
also known as the Brundtland Commission. From their
report entitled Our Common Future, the most cited definition of
sustainable development emerged. ÒSustainable development is development
which meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future
generations to meet their own needsÓ (World Commission, 1987: 43).
This intervention study describes and interprets the
journey of our university towards realization of its potential for
sustainability. Its journey is not over, but there is a glimpse of a vision,
that of a path towards which it can reach its potentiality for achieving
overall sustainability. There is a worldwide movement of universities towards
sustainability, observable in their operations, curriculum, and research. New
Mexico State University (hereafter NMSU) has embarked upon a sustainability
initiative that requires collaboration among all levels of administration,
faculty, staff, and students. NMSU consists of four community colleges and a
main campus with five colleges. Sustainability management requires coordination
and collaboration among the colleges, administration, and students. As noted by
Nelson (2000: 413) ÒInterorganizational collaboration is increasingly seen as
an important process in environmental management.Ó Collaboration among these
constituencies is often difficult. Ambiguity surrounding the administrationÕs
priorities causes uncertainties that dis-incentivize collaboration. Participants,
who are highly motivated, yet do not perceive collaboration as taking place,
may become resentful. This may also lead to a decrease in actor support for
positions necessary to the collaborative effort. The commitment required for
collaboration is long-term; this decreases the ease with which participating
levels agree to collaborate (Nelson, 2000). The idea of sustained collaboration,
then, is vital in creating a sustainable NMSU. The rationale of this
cooperation in a holistic context is important in that any secluded solution
intended to address a system-wide problem is inappropriate as the solution
itself is only designed to serve component rather than holistic goals (Lao,
1996; Tao and BSA, 2000).
Our research is relevant to this special issue as it
highlights the mismatch between what the university wishes to deliver in terms
of sustainability and its actual path towards sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
Sustainable-authentic-potentiality (or the SAP process) is practical (Sandburg Tsukas 2011) strategy as practice (Johnson, Langley, Melin, Wittington 2007) in a process whereby
sustainability, ethics, and entrepreneurship are unified. We explore the
question of how this mismatch can be reconciled when there are multiple,
competing definitions of sustainability in an organization such as NMSU.
A new school of thought in organizational studies is
Ôontological inquiry,Õ which analyzes the ÔholisticÕ view of the
synchronization of individuals, organizations, and society. This leads to a
radical shift from epistemic and ontic assumptions by establishing ontological
ones that include criteria for developing ecological ÔsustainableÕ university
performances for producing the Ôcommon-good.Õ Ontologically, this is defined as
the meaning of heart of care. Central to our intervention study is the
importance of this heart of care. If we look at the university's path over the
last 100 plus years, and consider how the path has changed after the 1960s, we
find that commitments are drawing a future to influence the present. The
university is drawn into what Heidegger calls a totality of involvement (that
is primordially ontological) that makes the path of sustainability deepen and
be a more foretellable path. This kind of work
stresses the importance of the spiral-antenarrative as strategic. That is, the
ontological antenarrative is a major contribution to both sustainability and
sustainability strategy as practice (Chia, 2004; Chia & Holt, 2006; Chia & MacKay, 2007; Rasche & Chia,
2009) and understanding the complexity of the aforementioned spiral
antenarrative (Sandberg
& Tsoukas, 2011; Tsoukas, 2005).
This article investigates how sustainability reveals
itself using an Ôontological storytelling inquiryÕ
(OSI) methodology. OSI is defined as a methodology of inquiry that elicits
ontological assumptions in the storytelling of an organization. OSI adds a
methodological tool to the field of sustainability science (Kates et al.,
2001). It helps address the need for analysis of
vulnerability in sustainability (Turner
et al., 2003). Further, OSI is part of an action research project
in which the authors are catalysts to the process of system change. In this
instance, we are catalysts of sustainability system change. OSI is therefore itself a catalyst to
the process of sustainability system change at NMSU. Care and concern for ÒenvironmentalityÓ are featured components of Martin
HeideggerÕs (1962: 95) ontological inquiry. ÒThe ÔenvironmentÕÓ arranges itself
in Òits specific worldhood in its significanceÓ by articulating (or
storytelling) Òthe context of involvements...to encounter the ready-to-hand in
its environmental spaceÓ (Heidegger, 1962: 138). This ties sustainability to HeideggerÕs
notions of environmentality, that is, to Being-there,
in places, in environments, in ontological ways. For example, work-environment,
supplier-environment, equipment-environment, and these environmentsÕ relation
to exploiting or caring for the world of Nature are ontological ways of Being.
Sustainability is not a groundless, free-floating concept in Heidegger. Here we
focus on care for environmental sustainability using HeideggerÕs ontological
inquiry methodology.
Our contribution to the special issue is an
ontological approach to temporality and system change. Specifically, we address
what the meaning of sustainability is in a university system. Sustainability,
defined as care for future generations, has the possibility of arising from the
future, coming to the present ahead of itself (Heidegger 1962: 237). Unlike the
usual retrospective approaches prominent in organization theory, sustainability
is encountered in ways of taking action, coming back futurally
in Ôanticipatory resolutenessÕ in order to change operation, curriculum, and
research systems by making sustainability present. This occurs in what
Heidegger (1962: 374) calls Òthe character of Ôhaving beenÕ [that] arises from
the future, and in such a way that the future which Ôhas beenÕ (or better which
Ôis in the process of having beenÕ) releases from itself the Present.Ó
Utilizing the above-cited definition of
sustainability as that development which meets the needs of the present without
comprising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs, this
essay is structured as follows.
First, we introduce ontological storytelling inquiry methodology (OSI).
Next, we provide a history of sustainability at NMSU as a backdrop against
which to explore the context of sustainability through in-depth interviews with
internal stakeholders. Finally, we
conclude with the sustainability interventions of negotiating the conflicting
definitions of sustainability and incorporating what Heidegger calls ontology
of care into NMSUÕs strategic goals.
Part I: Ontological Storytelling Inquiry
This section develops our qualitative and interpretive
approach. We use ontological storytelling inquiry (OSI) as our methodology. We
define this methodology as the investigation of the question "What does it
mean to be authentically aware of 'Being-in-the-world'?" We look at
Being-in-the-world as it relates to caring and concern. This methodology
intends to examine the differences in perceptions of sustainability. Temporally, we look at
sustainability within the Primordial time of NMSUÕs lifecycle. Primordial time
is not the same as Òclock time.Ó Primordial time is the time from birth until
death. This concept defines the landscape of an organization or system. In this
case, it is the period of time beginning with NMSUÕs inception through its sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
This ontological inquiry casts light on the ways in
which sustainability and non-sustainability systems within-the-university
are encountered Ôwithin-time-nessÕ. Heidegger (1962: 278) refers to
Òwithin-time-ness" as the making manifest of the Òessential possibility of
the temporalizing of temporality.Ó Which is to say, the possibility of turning
cosmic clock time into time experienced phenomenologically.
Our ontological inquiry is about the Òprimordial temporalizing of temporalityÓ
of a sustainability care becoming an authentic potentiality for-being-a-whole
sustainability-system in an Òontological meaning of careÓ (ibid. p. 278). The
questions posed to interviewees were formed to probe the past, present, and
potential initiatives and definitions for sustainability at NMSU.
Questions sought to examine the ontological meaning
of sustainability care, in both its historicality and its futurity. By futurity
we mean the "fore-having" of sustainability meaning of care that is
Òahead-of-itselfÓ temporally, toward sustainable-authentic-potentiality, where
care is ahead of the ontic circumstances of enacted sustainable systems. The
OSI approach is one of strategy as practice (Chia &
Holt, 2006). Thus, we asked leaders from multiple levels the
following questions to reveal the ontological sustainability meaning of care at
NMSU.
Questions
1. What does
sustainability mean to you?
2. What does
sustainability mean in regards to NMSU?
3. Who would
(should) sustainability look like at NMSU (perfect world?)
4. Tell us
about the history of sustainability at NMSU?
5. What is
your role in the process?
a. Who is this process for?
6. How is care
about sustainability becoming apparent?
7. Tell me
about the care in regards to sustainability at NMSU.
a. Who
(students, faculty, administration, regents)
8. Being of
care?
9. Have
peoplesÕ hearts changed?
10. Are
there more hearts on campus that have a tender spot for earth friendly
behavior?
11. Are
we doing things on the NMSU campus in an earth friendly manner?
12. Are
there signs of increased institutional awareness?
a. If so, what
are they?
13. How
is sustainability embraced at different institutional levels of NMSU?
The main strength of our study is that our attempt
at an intervention study is a necessary outcome of our observation. In Quantum
PhysicsÕ Observer Effect, there is what Karen Barad calls an intra-activity of
materiality (wave-particle) and discourse (of which storytelling is a
significant domain). In doing interviews with sustainability-minded people, we
anticipate our questions and observations will have an observerÕs effect.
According to Barad (2003, 2007), Ôspacetimemattering,Õ
storytelling, and the material world intra-penetrate (see summary in Table 1). A consideration of the
interaction between the world, which we sought to understand through this
analysis and our own biases as interviewers, is necessary in evaluating this
study. The provision of Table 1 illustrates this interplay. On the vertical axis
is epistemic, ontic, ontology, and care. Epistemology deals with the study of
knowledge. What is it we can know? How can we know it? The ontic refers to the
physical or a fact. Ontology is the study of reality or metaphysics. Care is
the ethical aspect. The horizontal axis deals with the spatial-temporal and
equipment or instruments employed in the understanding.
Table 1: Time-Equipment-Space in
Ontological Inquiry
|
|
|
|
|
TIME |
EQUIPMENT |
SPACE |
E P I S T E M I C |
Narrative-retrospection (antiquity) "having-being-there" (yet no longer) |
An entity that is historical Tools and things
that are timeless (not 'in time'). |
Schematically-mapped in terms of heritage (not the territory). |
O N T I C |
What-is and what-is-not ('present-at-hand') Nowness of living story
webs of relationship |
'Ontical Fact' of matter/material stuff Tools or equipment
we encounter in-the-world of organizations, but just
''present-at-hand' (not yet readiness-at-hand). |
Our work environment, the environing nature, and environing consumption |
O N T O L O G I C |
Historicality Being-in-time, an extential authentic historical, a finitude, ready-to-hand authentic possibilities factically exist as 'anticipatory resoluteness' a Thrownness "something Situational which is making
present - that temporalizing of temporality" that we are calling
spiral-antenarrative. |
Equipment and stuff ready-at-hand, for uses, and functions. Potentiality-for-Being
as equipment Being-in-the-world
in readiness-at-hand |
Place, revealed in factical possibilities of authentic existence The thrown takes
over handing down readiness of possibilities Being-in-place |
C A R E |
Throwness as the basic attribute of care |
Taking up something that brings simplicity of its 'fate.' |
The character of goodness that lies in making authentic caring possible, there |
The historical
information, which follows, provides an objective reference for the reader to
assist in this evaluation.
Part II: Historical Context and Interviews Regarding Sustainability
A timeline of sustainability at NMSU will assist the
reader in understanding references to a particular event/activity made by the
authors or interviewees. In the intervention outlined later our groupÕs work in
assembling a chronology of historical milestones, by which sustainability has
emerged as something the university is embracing, was acknowledged as providing
an account of how sustainability has emerged at NMSU. Sustainability has
expanded from a nuts-and-bolts initiative one sees at other universities to
something that involves a synergy with education and research. As Heidegger
says (1996: 169) "Attunement essentially belong [s] to a mode of being in
which it is brought before itself and it is disclosed to itself in its throwness." This implies that history is about the potential
for the future to be a whole system in sustainability.
The interpretation has already decided, finally or
provisionally, upon a definite conceptuality; it is grounded in a
fore-conception. This means that our intervention is based in the ontological
analytic in fore-seeing and fore-conception of how
sustainability could effectively unfold in a sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
The sustainability intervention is grounded in fore-having,
fore-sight, fore-conception, and fore-caring. There are two kinds of care: ontical concernfulness and ontological heart of care. The first
step in this unfolding is establishing a time line that grounds the history of
the system. Please note in this manuscript, use of the term ÔAggieÕ refers to
the UniversityÕs official mascot.
Figure 1: Timeline of Sustainability Emergence at the University
1977 |
Establishment of Southwest Technology Development Institute (SWTDI), a non-profit, University-based organization that provides applied research and development services to private and public sector clients with active research programs in energy and related systems. Note: in 2006 SWTDI became part of the Institute for Energy and the Environment. |
1990 |
WERC established – WERC: A Consortium for Environmental Education and Technology Development. |
1991 |
First International Environmental Design Contest - University Institute for Energy & the Environment. |
1994 |
-State of New Mexico mandates all institutions of higher education to divert 25% of their waste, meaning NMSU had to develop recycling program to comply with the diversion criteria. -Office of Facilities and
Services (OFS) establishes integrated solid waste management program focused
on recycling, reduction, and improved handling of campus-generated solid
wastes. |
2001 |
-Student Green Pledge is created with University professor appointed as faculty contact. -OASIS class begins with
an emphasis on organic farming led by a faculty advisor |
2004 |
NMSU President Michael V. Martin establishes ÒThe Sustainability and Climate Change Task ForceÓ headed by Robert Moulton to deal with rising energy prices and climate commitment. |
2005 |
Art Lucero is appointed Solid Waste & Recycling Manager in September and implements new equipment and procedures to expand the Aggie Recycling Center. Mr. Lucero opens the door for students to do community service projects with the recycling center and to propose new recycling programs. The Aggie Recycling Center installs containers in buildings for the collection of recyclables and implements a collection schedule |
2007 |
-NMSU President Michael V. Martin signs the American College of University Presidents Climate Commitment (ACUPCC), making NMSU a charter signatory. -College of Engineering
beings offering a renewable energy technologies
minor. -NMSU moves to utilizing
greener transportation. - An alliance to develop
wind research facility is established. |
2008 |
-Office of Facilities and Services (OFS) began taking part in RecycleMania. - NMSU sends a staff
member to Washington, D.C. to meet with the StateÕs congressional delegation
to advocate for sustainability issues. - A baseline inventory of
greenhouse gas emissions completed. |
2009 |
- The Institute for Energy and the Environment hosted the Re-Energize America Conference examining energy policy and alternative energy sources including sun, wind, and algal biofuels. -Interim University
President Waded Cruzado-Salas committed to developing an institutional action
plan to achieve carbon neutrality by becoming a signatory to the PresidentsÕ
Climate Commitment. The first
iteration was completed and submitted to the Association for the Advancement
of Sustainability in Higher Education (AASHE). -Updated inventory of greenhouse
gas emissions completed. -Sustainability Learning
and Curriculum Team established to develop advising and curriculum
strategies. - The University Teaching
Academy creates a new class to assist faculty in infusing sustainability into
curricula. -Sustainability Task
Force Created. -Staff member went to D.C. to meet
with the StateÕs congressional delegation to advocate for sustainability
issues. -University department
publishes 30 pieces related to sustainability. - Interim PresidentWaded Cruzado-Salas declares 2009, the ÒYear of
SustainabilityÓ and signed Talloires Declaration of the Association of
University Leaders for a Sustainable Future. -Sustainability council
formed. -Inventory of courses
that have emphasis on sustainability and the environment completed. -Web portal developed to
promote sustainability activities and activities, gather ideas. -NMSU ranks 3rd place
nationwide in RecyleMania. -OASIS group hosts World
CafŽ networking event on sustainability. |
2010 |
-A series of 3 Green papers prepared by University professors and presented to the Sustainability Council. Green Paper 1- Sustainability
at the University. Green Paper 2 - Ecological
Landscaping at the University for personal, environmental, and fiscal health. Green Paper 3- Greening
the University Campus: Modified Landscape Plan . -2nd place nationwide in RecycleMania. -The University joins the
National Alliance for Advanced Biofuels. -The University creates
an Office of Sustainability under the Office of Facilities and Services. -Sustainability Manager
hired. |
2011 |
-Faculty Senate unanimously passed a memorial to recognize the new Office of Sustainability to support the plans and goals of the Sustainability Council. -The University
administration recognizes and approves an Office of Sustainability and agrees
to support the plans and goals of the Sustainability Council. -Two University
Professors work to organize a conference to spur economic development of
sustainable energy resources and activities within the Southwest. |
NMSU is obligated to perform towards Ôtheoretical
performance goalsÕ determined by the Board of Regents, President, Provost,
Vice-Presidents, and Academic Deans (hereafter, the Administration). Such goals affect the UniversityÕs
stakeholders including the Faculty Senate, prior administrations, student
organizations, and the City of Las Cruces. In the recent past, the City of Las
Cruces has increased their sustainability efforts, leading to a community
atmosphere more conducive to sustainability (Costanza,
1991). For example, recycling bins were placed around the
city and a recycling center was created. More recently curbside recycling was
implemented, a sustainability manager position was created, and a ÔGreenÕ
Chamber of Commerce was developed and promoted. These initiatives spurred similar
efforts at NMSU.
As noted
in Figure 1, following the sustainability initiatives of NMSU students, two
University presidents signed agreements related to sustainability beginning in
2007. Historically, this embracing of sustainability has been recognized as
authentic. This demonstrates how particular persons not ascribing to the pure
instrumentalist point of view can lead to sweeping change. The embrace of
sustainability at different levels of NMSU is:
Éstill very much a matter of individual faculty
from a teaching point of view. If you get someone like David
Boje, who's very aware and interested and very supportive. Then you have
other faculty that individually take it upon
themselves, some more vocal and visible about it than others. You have Dr.
Connie Falk who's visible, David Boje who's visible. You also have a lot of
other people who do things that are not as visible or vocal, but still do
things that are visible in teaching. That depends on the individual faculty
members. The dean's don't have a problem with it, but there's not mandate from
the deans because there's no mandate from the provost or the president that
"a cretin number of courses must include this". We try to do this as
part of our STARS rating system. The point is that there's no mandate to it. I
think more and more we have faculty. One of the things when we put together the
list, you may have seen the list, David Boje has it now but I put it together
in the year of sustainability; just going around trying to get as many inputs
around the campus trying to get an idea of the classes that have a
sustainability aspect to them. A lot of people were surprised
by the classes that had sustainability aspects to them. They weren't
sustainability classes, but they had units or aspects of sustainability. We had
Margret Loring that teaches at DACC on the English
department and one of the things she has her students work on is writing about
sustainability. She gets her work in, getting them to write, but one of the
ways she can get them to write about sustainability. One of the ways you can
weave in, you might think "how can you do sustainability in an
introductory English class", that gives you an example of how that can
work into it.
The 2010 Faculty Senate Memorial, further evidence
of faculty's historical embracing of sustainability, included a provision for
the implementation of a measurement system to track sustainability (Cramer
2011). The Sustainability Tracking and Reporting System (STARS) initiative
resulted in a Bronze Star rating in 2011.
As part of this measurement system, the Education & Research
(E&R) subcommittee of the NMSU Sustainability Council earned 25.75% of
points available, yet failed to earn credit for ongoing sustainability
research, despite evidence to the contrary. For instance, in the NMSU Year of
Sustainability (2009) document over 100 research projects are reported. This
claim is reasserted on the NMSU sustainability website: ÒUniversity scientists
are involved in some 100 projects, ranging from desalination technology to
employing satellite remote sensing technology as a means to help farmers conserve
water. Wind energy production is being studied as well. NMSU researchers
compile and monitor data gathered from a 50-meter meteorological tower at the
Agricultural Science Center at ClovisÓ (NMSU Sustainability website, 2011).
However, there is currently no university-wide system for tracking
sustainability-related research, although the STARS metric is in place as a way
for NMSU to judge its sustainability initiatives.
The 2009 Year of Sustainability and the
implementation of the STARS sustainability tracking report obligated the
University to implement sustainable practices in curriculum, research, and
operational systems, creating an environment focused on change. With the appointment of new university
president Barbara Couture, the faculty mobilized to encourage her to continue
the initiative for sustainability. For example, there was a Faculty Senate
Bill, which passed unanimously on Feb. 19, 2011 and recognized the new Office
of Sustainability at NMSU and supported the plans and goals of the Sustainability
Council. However, recognition of the Office of Sustainability was inauthentic,
as the Office reports to an assistant to the Vice President for Facilities,
several levels below the President. As such, sustainability advocates have
weathered the turnover of five university presidents during the past decade.
With the departure of Cruzado-SalasÕ departure, it is not clear if Couture will
endorse sustainability efforts completely. What follows is a summary of three
memorandums sent from NMSUÕs ÔGreen TeamÕ to President Barbara Couture, which
prompted the passing of the 2011 Faculty Senate Bill.
In an effort to capitalize on Interim President
Waded Cruzado-SalasÕ Year of Sustainability, three sustainability memorandums
were sent to current President Barbara Couture from the NMSU ÔGreen TeamÕ
during the spring 2010 semester.
The first memorandum recommended the University create a dedicated
sustainability position. The ÔGreen
TeamÕ believed in order for NMSUÕs sustainability efforts to become more productive,
apparent, and unified, the PresidentÕs leadership team must include a
Sustainability Director to more readily tie the UniversityÕs goals to the
sustainability needs of the educational (Falk, McKimme,
Boje 2010a).
The second memorandum sought to improve NMSUÕs
ecological landscaping. Specifically, the report highlighted the ethical,
legal, and financial concerns stemming from the UniversityÕs high maintenance
greenery and lawns. The report indicated by changing NMSUÕs landscape to
complement its location in the Chihuahua Desert, the University could lower its
water, insecticide, fertilizer, and administration costs (Falk, McKimme, Boje 2010b).
The final memorandum provided the UniversityÕs
leadership team with tangible and intangible benefits as well as
recommendations for implementing the UniversityÕs ecologically-friendly
landscape. The report referenced NMSUÕs master plan, which acknowledges the
UniversityÕs landscape Òreflects a time when an east coast style of lawns and
broad canopy trees were used to attract people to the campus and the desert in
generalÓ (Board of Regents 2006). It further states, ÒCampus landscapes should
be reflective of the region and be sustainableÓ (Board of Regents 2006). The
report indicated by creating an ecologically-friendly
landscape, the University would fulfill ethical obligations while saving at
least five hundred thousand dollars a year (Walker, McKimme,
Falk & Boje 2010).
This relationship between the UniversityÕs financial
health and sustainability efforts has been recognized by faculty and student
organizations. In an email sent to NMSU alumni on November 4, 2011, Jim Matchin (2011-2012 President of the NMSU Alumni
Association) stated: ÒIt is an exciting time at your alma mater! New Mexico
State University is entering a new era of growth, sustainability, and excellence under the leadership of President
Barbara Couture. She has outlined seven goals to propel the University to a new
level of success in the student achievement research, extension service, and
community engagementÉ University goal 6 involves the engagement of alumni.Ó (personal communication, 2011) President Barbara CoutureÕs sixth goal
aims to increase NMSUÕs alumni donations, which Matchin
ties to the UniversityÕs Ônew eraÕ of growth and sustainability. Matchin realizes what Couture does not: Sustainability has
a positive connotation which appeals to the alumni
communityÕs heart and financial generosity (ibid.). The recognition of
sustainability by business schools is linked to an overarching questioning of
business school curricula.
The City of Las Cruces and the NMSU educational
community have initiated sustainability efforts, but a larger movement has
emerged among business schools called ÔOccupy Wall StreetÕ. This movement questions corporate
legitimacy and investigates financial playersÕ roles in the current economic
crisis (Shrivastava, 2011). Stemming from this
movement is the World Business School Council (WBSC) for Sustainable Business,
which aims to find ways in which UniversitiesÕ business education resources can
be reallocated towards moral and ecological ethics and sustainability. Two
issues addressed in this paper are the attitudes and perceptions of business
school faculty and administrators regarding sustainability efforts in
curriculum and research.
According to the WBSC, higher education institutions
have failed for decades to implement a sense of moral leadership through
business schools. Future leaders are educated but a sense of moral and
ecological ethics within our curriculum are lacking. Professor Shrivastava, from the John Molson school of Business at
Concordia University, attributes Òflawed corporate leadersÓ to a deficiency of
ethics in higher education settings (Shrivastava,
2011). Thus, the WBSC hopes to inspire higher education institutions to take
charge and adjust their curriculum to provide students with the tools and
resources to become involved in ethical and sustainability matters. As such,
curriculum and behavioral changes must first come from the institution in hopes
that its efforts and culture may trickle down and change studentsÕ core
beliefs. NMSUÕs Green team has tried to answer WSBCÕs call for ethical
leadership in the higher-education communities. The Green TeamÕs third
memorandum also suggests sustainability efforts on campus contribute to the
UniversityÕs moral leadership perceptions. When the UniversityÕs senior
leadership supports sustainability efforts, a healthier and more
environmentally conscious atmosphere is created for students, staff, and
faculty. Such an atmosphere promotes the type of leadership the WSBC feels is
critical in establishing a culture of ecological and sustainable
responsibility.
Sustainability Inquiry Associations
In what follows we make associations between
sustainability that is epistemic (knowledge, categories, themes),
sustainability that is ontic (having occurrence in that-is presently the system
of action), and what is ontologically the meaning of sustainability-in-caring,
as a future, a potentiality for change that has some momentum.
At NMSU, there are those who are epistemologically
engaged in knowledge about sustainability, and teach it or learn it. There are those, who devote themselves
to ontic Thing-ness of sustainability, measuring it, present-at-hand. Then there
are those with the heart of care, concern, and answerability for Indifference
and for authentic sustainability where students, faculty, staff, and
administrators are liberated for care of the with-world. Figure 2
illustrates the inter-connectedness of these concepts we attempt to uncover in
this analysis.
Figure
2 Sustainability Inquiry Associations
Epistemic - An epistemological (or ÔknowingÕ) which makes
retrospective assertions about knowledge. For example, in envisioning the
desired ÔsustainabilityÕ performance, our university is encountering the
ÔrealitiesÕ of an unsustainable system, where much about sustainability remains
an epistemic or theoretic schema.
Ontic - ÔOntical
inquiryÕ is defined by attesting to Ôwhat-isÕ, and Ôwhat-is-not.Õ
For example, our university measures the more ÔonticÕ performance (measured by
propositions, such as weight of recycled paper collected from each university
building or its dollar value; the number of courses containing a sustainability
theme). In our recent assessment, we were able to demonstrate sustainability
topics in our curriculum, but were not able to produce measures of any
sustainability research.
Ontological - Ontology is defined as the meaning of Being, and is often about the
future. An ontological inquiry into sustainability concerns disclosedness of a
kind of Being, in terms of existence, which has meaning, but is only a future,
whose ontic measures are not yet. We could say that the ontological meaning of
care is pre-ontic because it is anticipated sustainability, which is only a
potentiality, yet is one that has resoluteness of conviction. Systems must
change to bring about this conviction.
To summarize, Figure 2 depicts the past, present,
and future. Epistemic ideas are about the past, the ontic is in the Present,
and the ontological is in the future. The ontological meaning of
Being-sustainable, or having care for sustainability, persists as a
potentiality, a possible future that is not yet present. It is distinguishable
from the ontic and epistemic knowledge established in historical practices.
However, rather than leave these temporal realms separated, we wish to make
associations in an attempt to better understand the system of sustainability at
NMSU. Each element of time and its relationship with the system of
sustainability must be investigated in order to understand the whole system. As
Heidegger prescribes (1962: 39), Ò...time as its standpoint...must be brought
to light-and genuinely conceived-as the horizon for all understanding of Being
and for any way of interpreting it.Ó
A contribution to sustainability theory, practice,
and method is to make temporal associations between epistemic, ontic, and
ontological. For example, an
epistemic-ontological relation can be constituted in assessing how many courses
have ontically-present a sustainability module, how many departments of the
university offer sustainability majors or minors. These are criteria used in
STARS. Another example can be characterized by HeideggerÕs (1962: 34, 39)
reference to the Òontico-ontologicalÓ relationship between what-is ontically
present coming together with an ontology of care, as a
Ôhistorical happening.Õ The signing
of the Talloires Agreement by NMSUÕs Interim President Cruzado-Salas and the
accompanying declaration of 2009 as the Year of Sustainability is an example of
such a historical happening. It reflected the ontology of care of the students
and Cruzado-Salas. The signing of the Talloires Declaration was a coming
together of this ontology with university policy.
This leaves the third association, epistemic-ontico.
This is perhaps the most difficult, because of the longstanding Cartesian split
between subject and object (subjective & objective, idea & thing). It
is the task of Heideggerian ontology to heal that split with care and concern
by focusing on the system of sustainability outside of its Everydayness, taking
into account its entirety-its Òhistorical happeningsÓ and its futurity
potential for-Being. According to Heidegger, focusing on the system in its
Everydayness is not an authentic investigation, as the everyday is a pallid
place to be (Heidegger, 1962). Thus, in our focus on the different planes of
temporality of the system, we are considering not only what sustainability at
the university has-been, what it is-now, or what it could-be,
but simultaneously considering the whole of this temporality in an authentic
investigation of the system. A disclosure of the entire system is required to
draw out the sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
A second contribution to sustainability theory, practice
and method is to draw out the disclosedness of sustainability for the first
time as something beyond mere concept formation or knowledge to an actual
sustainability conscience. There are fragments or parts of sustainability, but
as of yet, no authentically historical whole system. Sustainability has never reached its sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
There is a fluctuating gap between stakeholders favoring ÔsustainabilityÕ and
the Administration, making up its Ôcollective will.Õ Therefore, our methodological task is a
genealogy of the different possible ways of sustainability being more than a
possibility. This effort to seek out NMSUÕs heart of care involves
consideration of different perspectives; it cannot be a superficial analysis.
Deep ecology supports this deeper analysis. It
proposes that a lack of care is actually symptomatic of a deeper problem of the
human self, in which we as human beings are accepted as the dominant force over
nature. In order to find the heart of care, the human being must essentially be
reprogrammed in such a way that it seeks to live in harmony with nature versus
attempting to dominate it (Nelson, 1996). It is our opinion that such a drastic
notion is disheartening and that OSI can be a method for facilitating change at
NMSU.
We
identified three stages of sustainability, each of which encompasses one of the
conflicting definitions of sustainability found at NMSU. The three stages of
sustainability are intra-actives. For example, oneÕs Self can see the Òontico-ontologically
with an unprejudiced eye, it reveals itself as the ÔRealist subjectÕ of
everydaynessÓ (Heidegger, 1962: 166). When the ontical ÔTheyÕ stakeholders
present every judgment and choice-point decision as their own, the
answerability for sustainability goes to Ônobody.Õ ÒEverything that is
primordial gets glossed over as something that has long been well knownÓ (ibid,
p. 165).
Figure 3 Process Model
of Three Stages of Sustainability
Epistemologically, ÒÔempathyÕ is not an existential
primordial phenomenonÓ (ibid, p. 163). Knowing is psychical (i.e. sensemaking
or cognitive). It is the ÔsubjectsÕ representation in narrative ways that
covers up both ontic and ontological involvement. Ontically entities are
related as ÔThingsÕ of sustainability, insensitive to the heart of care and concernfulness because of the everydayness, leveling down,
that deprives sustainability of ÒanswerabilityÓ (Heidegger, 1962: 165). Without
the agency of the Self, sustainability at a public university is unburdened.
The heart of care ranges from Indifference to
authentic care. The concept of being-with-one-another is an essential
consideration in an authentic heart of care. The environment-mentality of being
concerned with-the-world is how we authentically encounter care. The how meaning of sustainability, from an
ontological perspective, comes from a primordial heart of care. This primordial heart of care can only be disclosed by
investigating individuals through individual encounters. This is because
the classic tendency to split knowledge into the ontic and epistemological
conceals ontological knowledge.
Solicitude
and Sustainability – ÒSolicitude is
guided by considerateness and forbearanceÓ (Heidegger, 1962:
159). There is a range of solicitudes from Indifference to authentic. How can those who devote
themselves to care and concern for sustainability become authentically
bound together in a public university?
The answer given by Heidegger is that either concern for environment
leaps in and dominates or sustainability leaps forth and liberates. This is in
line with our activity, seeking to be change-agents of the future (Dunphy,
Griffiths, & Benn, 2011).
Negative
Solicitude – Negative solicitude is
defined by a factical social arrangement of students,
faculty, staff, and administrators being-with-one-another in indifferent and
deficient modes: ÒBeing for, against, or without another, passing another by,
not ÔmatteringÕ to one anotherÓ (ibid, p. 158). Ontologically this negative
solicitude is something that a university can address in operations,
curriculum, and policy choice-points.
Positive
Solicitude – Positive solicitude can
be defined by those modes that range from taking peopleÕs ÔcareÕ for
sustainability, thrown out to those who can ÔcareÕ and give positive attending
to it, and letting them step back in when it is attended to, finished and at
their disposal (ibid, p. 158). In this mode the other becomes dominated and dependent,
as care of sustainability is taken away for a while or always. This is the
Ôwelfare work' with its factical agency.
Both
the negative and the positive solicitude is a concern that is existential. The
Ontic focus on ÔwhatÕ are sustainable practice of things present-at-hand of
several or many stakeholders doing what is sustainable in different ways covers
the primordial modes of deficit (Indifferent) solicitude and conceals the
positive solicitude interventions and the returning of sustainability in answerability
to people of the university.
Ontologically, readiness-to-hand of equipment of daily concern of
sustainability within-the-world of practices for taking care of sustainability,
Òleap aheadÓ (p. 159) in Òexistential potentiality-for-BeingÓ (p. 159)
to some future practices that are authentically sustainable and liberated,
Òfree environmentallyÓ (p. 160). Part III utilizes the differing levels of
solicitude to negotiate sustainability interventions and reconcile conflicting
definitions of sustainability by incorporating what Heidegger calls an ontology
of care into NMSUÕs strategic goals-thus leading to sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
Part III: Sustainability Interventions
Methodology: Data collection used in-depth interviewing with university members from different hierarchical levels. Interviews ranged from approximately sixty to ninety minutes. We recorded and transcribed the interviews, then provided transcriptions for review to the interviewees. The average interview transcription was twenty-five, single-spaced pages. Our reasoning in allowing this review by participants was to ensure the rigor of the data (Lincoln & Guba, 1985). In determining which excerpts to include, the team of nine researchers devoted approximately 2.5 hours per week of a regularly scheduled class to share and discuss the data. This allowed for a re-working of the data selected for inclusion based on the underlying themes being discovered. Such an iterant process is recommended in qualitative research (Corbin & Strauss, 2007). Further, we worked under the guidance of an expert qualitative researcher familiar with the grounded theory method.
Findings:
A number of contextual issues lead to
complexities in implementing sustainability at NMSU. These fluctuations and
fluxes pose challenges to moving the universityÕs systems towards a generalized
sustainability approach. Only system design and development that is an
authentic or a truly Ôhuman-oriented universityÕ that aligns its values and
assumptions to the universally accepted values regarding the purpose of
socioeconomic institutions may achieve sustainability.
In this section we highlight excerpts with interviewees, many of whom
spoke of these fluctuations and fluxes
as challenges to a sustainable NMSU. One basic source of these challenges
recognized by most interviewees appears to be the multiple, fragmentary,
definitions of sustainability at NMSU, amongst all levels of administration,
faculty, and students:
Well, I think the students are
(embracing sustainability) – there is a group of students that is
embracing it, there are student clubs now and groups. I think the faculty
– they are so busy with having to teach and get ready for classes and so
forth and so on. I think the administration is well, they – I know the
provost is very proactive with it, and I know that president [Couture] is very very supportive of the initiatives – sustainability
initiatives. I do know thatÉ
One respondent addressed the problem of defining sustainability and how
the lack of consensus can lead to this aspect being an excuse for a lack of
authenticity:
You
always hear that there are many, many definitions out there. I donÕt really
agree with that, to be honest with you. Um, I think people say that to cover
their backsides a little bit (laughs), cause often what theyÕre saying is
sustainable, is not.
He continued by providing a definition of what sustainability meant to
him:
With
that aside, my definition includes the 3 EÕs-taking into consideration the
environmental side, the economic sideÉ of any situation, and the social equity
side. And if you can apply all 3 of those andÉ when I think of sustainability the
working definition that I use is: ÒCan you do whatever youÕre doing, whether it
be farming and then do it again the next year without jeopardizing your ability
to do it the next year?Ó ÒDo you stay in business?Ó-so
thatÕs the economic side of things-ÒAre you selling things for a reasonable
cost?Ó ÒAre you maintaining the soil?Ó IÕll use agricultural examples a lot
cause thatÕs whereÉ a lot that I come from. ÒAre you improving the soil?Ó So
that kinda comes down to the
environmental side. ÒAnd are you treating workers with soil equity?Ó And so, if
you can answer all three of those, those are truly sustainable. And if anything that youÉ the first time
prevents you from doing it again the second time, if you degrade your soilÉ not
paying your workers a living salary for example, then youÕre not sustainable.
Another participant with direct responsibility for implementing
sustainability at NMSU offered a different definition:
Ésustainability is consciousness, awareness – we talked
about it in class yesterday – opening your mind to new and different
things, taking care of your own body. So its health and wellness – we are
sustaining our health. It is all of the things that people think of, you know,
the recycling, energy, water, conservation – you know – all of
those different things, are always included in it. But to me
, it is a small range because there is so much more – just being
conscious of all things, how to take care of the planet at all levels –
from the individual to the planetary.
And yet a third participant offered the following definition:
The definition which is
meeting needs today, in a way, which does not keep future generations
from meeting their needs. Which is the UN commission definition. But then I
tell people "what does that mean?",
"what does that boil down to?" It boils down to "Living Like there IS a Tomorrow.
For the most part, these definitions represent the
ontic (Ôwhat-isÕ and Ôwhat-is-notÕ) instead of the ontological (a futural
consideration of and care for sustainability). When asked what sustainability
meant in regards to NMSU, most of those interviewed provided examples of
sustainability that was ontic. A few recognized the ontic nature of what they
were characterizing, questioning the ontic nature of sustainability at NMSU:
WellÉ.thatÕs [what does sustainability at NMSU look like in a
perfect world?] a good question. To
be honest, I donÕt know. In
observing initiatives around here I can see that we have put out recycling
bins, I can see that we have hired a person to oversee sustainabilityÉ.umÉ.Does that translate into greener place? What I see are
small steps. What I would like to
see and what moves me is to see huge steps.
The question posed by the interviewee at the end is
recognition of the ontic, a questioning of those implementations of
sustainability that are not ontological. Recognition of ontic Ôgreenwashing,Õ
that is, sustainability as an image-enhancer, was apparent to certain
interviewees. When asked what sustainability would look like in a perfect world
(an ontological approach to sustainability), interviewees expressed their
frustration at this Ôwindow-dressingÕ sustainability:
What
I think we would get away from are theÉ.what seem to
me as maybe symbolic gestures that I donÕt understand. For example, one of the
things that I did notice that at one point in time the soap dispensers in all the
restrooms were changed and suddenly it had an NMSU, sort of, sustainability
sticker on it or something. But, I didnÕt know what made that more sustainable
than something else and I question whether it really made it sustainable
because they obviously had to use more plastic to create these new (chuckle)
new paper towel and soap dispensers. So, IÕd get away from the symbolic
gesturesÉif we are going to do recyclingÉitÕs not clear to meÉ.likeÉfor here, for instance here in Frenger
we donÕt have the recycling bins. Why would they not be inside the place where
youÕre most usingÉ..So, we need a realÉ.largeÉ.grandÉsystemic planÉ.where
maybeÉtake one unit at a time..you
green it totally and make that the model and then go to the next unit.
Students also recognize this Ôgreenwashing,Õ
and alter their interactions with faculty accordingly:
And so, when I tell my professors, when IÕm
in advising or something, that I want a careerÉ umÉ in sustainability, thatÕs kinda hard for me to say
sometimes. Because I feel like theyÕll look down on me for it.
This comment suggests that those interested in the
ontological meaning of care for sustainability are more discerning than to
simply accept attempts to portray an image of sustainability.
Obtaining money for sustainable projects was another
ontic definition for sustainability recognized by interviewees. The following excerpts by one of the persons closely involved in
sustainability initiatives at NMSU highlight how the fiscal aspect to
sustainability is given greater importance than an authentic sense of
sustainability. The interviewee
commented:
We
have to be...there is sustainability fiscal responsibility. Nobody ever really
talks about that but we have to have a pool of money coming in, and it has to
be sustainable....reduce the cost, reduce the cost....
This
interviewee is supporting the importance of sustainability, to the point that
it is financially feasible, and does not recognize this definition as ontic.
Another important individual at the university also noted the financial
limitations that hinder achieving authentic sustainability at NMSU:
At the administrative level, you have
people framing things as sustainability when itÕs probably economically driven.
We do it (sustainability) primarily because economics. As long as it is not too
painful, we will care. But if care begins to be painful, and how we operate,
and the cost of operations we will not care quite as much.
The
above observation is very astute, in that the interviewee immediately
recognized that care for sustainability would exist insofar as it was
economical:
It is
ironic that in its bid to make money, the financial administrators of the
university show no concern for sustainability. Referring to a conversation with
the university president, one of the interviewees reported, ÒAnd I said to her,
do we have sustainable investing? And she looked at me, she goes (quoting), Ôwe
just invest to make money, I donÕt care where it goesÕÓ.
Students at NMSU involved with sustainability also acknowledge the
limitations of the sustainability movement, yet appear
to recognize the limitations beyond those of the superficially fiscal:
To
me, um, I think itÕs about acknowledging the fact that we have limited
resources. And thatÕs not only physically, but like, morally we have limited
resources, and umÉ ethically. And itÕs also about sometimes making choices that
might be harder or more expensive orÉ something now in order to benefit the
future generation like not leaving, not leaving them with some kind of burden
on future generations and the future planet.
A final source of frustration in achieving sustainability at NMSU has
been the underlying tension between those proposing large
scale changes and those recognizing incremental changes as more
realistic, and the derivative results of letting people recognize the
importance of sustainability on their own v. pushing the issue. This fact was highlighted by an interviewee who commented:
When
you ask, do people care? ..they care. Are they
knowledgeable? That is something to be debated....I
know there is a lot more people getting involved, and there is more people
there than what we think... I think we need to educate, educate, educate, and
then set an example, and let everyone be themselves.
They are individuals and we all have different thoughts and we were brought up
differently, we come from different backgrounds – its not something that
I would think we would want to force down peopleÕs throats, but I think it is
something that we do it in the right way, we will encourage. And we have to
reach the young, Ôcause they will grow up with it all the time and would be an
accepted practice.
Some interviewees appreciated the ontic, or
Ôsmall-stepsÕ towards sustainability, and stressed that while an ontological
approach is most desirable ÒWhat I see and what moves me is to see huge steps .
. .Ó it may not be the most realistic:
I
tend to be very happy about it (sustainability), uhÉ cause you get more
progress made if youÕre nice about it and approach it asÉ uhÉ Ôthat was goodÉ that was good progress, letÕs keep going.Õ
Instead of saying Ôwe still donÕt have this.
This
suggests that the context and encapsulation by the traditional grounds-based
sustainability can lead to real, but hard to see, changes. A
visible sign of this was described by one respondent:
One of [the visible signs of
sustainability] is that we are going, of course, we are required, but of course
we are going for all buildings and renovations, significant renovations, are
going for the LEED, at least silver if not higher, standard. We have at the
Carlsbad campus I've forgotten what building it is. We have over in Alamogordo
that's LEED Gold. Governor Richardson said some buildings have to meet LEED
gold or silver and we're taking it further, all of our major buildings and
renovations are going to mention it. As president cotor
said in her state of the university address, we have 18 projects that are going
to meet LEED silver or better. That's the kind of thing; again you don't look
at a building and say "that's a LEED platinum,
that's a LEED gold". You don't see those sort of
things, but the new performance arts center over there is going in that
direction. However, in the long-hall, the carbon emissions the water usage, the
way it's going to be used has a big impact on the kind of foot-print
we leave. It also has a big impact on how we train students. That gets back to
the educational aspects of how we train people in the university.
One interviewee proposed that this ontic approach
was the only way to make changes, saying ÒWe left the philosophical posturing
out of itÉÓ in reference to his attempts to bring different NMSU stakeholders
together to discuss sustainability. However, support for large scale,
ontological change was proposed by certain interviewees, particularly those
recognizing the necessity of a holistic NMSU:
É.I mean, in terms of education I think we are
doing a tremendous job in education. Like the recent, umÉÉthe
Sundt Honors programÉuhÉ.that took in a lot of applications for new
coursework. A sizable number ofÉ.itÕs my understanding of the applicantsÉummÉ.submitted
courses on sustainability and the course that actually won was on
sustainability and they were taking a group to Central America to study it
somewhere else. So, in terms of what we are doing at NMSU, in terms of
education, I feel we are making tremendous efforts, but you would have to
wonder what students are thinking when they take this course and then they walk
into the food court and thereÕs plastic forks and spoons and Styrofoam cups and
no recycling binsÉumm..Or
even when we host catered eventsÉare we choosing the people that bring the
pizza in the campus so theyÕre the sustainable pizza suppliers. I mean, I donÕt know, but I think those
choices begin to matterÉand if you make them at every level of decision, they
add up to a real culture and value system of sustainability thatÕs very visible
to our students that we haveÉprobably a much greater impact, at least a
reinforcing impact for the courses youÕre going to offer.
The true definition of sustainability, care for
future generations, was inherent in the definitions given by some interviewees;
most interestingly, the students were in touch with this definition:
Well, I think sustainability necessitates a
shift from being selfish to selfless,Ó and ÒÉ itÕs about acknowledging the fact
that we have limited resources. And thatÕs not only physically, but like,
morally we have limited resources, and umÉ ethically. And itÕs also about
sometimes making choices that might be harder or more expensiveÉ in order to
benefit the future generationsÉ like, not leaving, not leaving them with some
kind of burden on future generations and the future planet.
It
is obvious that even amongst those teaching sustainability and charged with its
administration, the definition of the topic is ambiguous. Beyond the frustrations caused by definitional, fiscal, and intensity
level disagreements, students acknowledged perceived active resistance to their
own efforts to initiate a sustainability movement, from both faculty and their
fellow students:
They
[professor] think a lot of this is just blown out of proportion and misunderstood
andÉ umÉ IÕve recently trying to be more confident about my opinions and trying
toÉ I really just want to tell people ÒYou need to educate yourselves.Ó You
canÕt just say: ÒOh, you guys are crazy.Ó You need to like be informed andÉ
andÉ thenÉ tell me: ÒYouÕre crazy.Ó After youÕve read up on it.
People
[other students] just think of some hippie guy in cutoff jean shorts who just
goes out and grows who knows what all day.
Perhaps increased administrative support would assist in dismantling this
perceived resistance, as support of any movement requires buy-in by top-level
executives. The interviews revealed that there was a perceived lack of
authentic support for the movement. For example one respondent commented:
The
provost is extremely sustainability oriented. You know, she was the boss or the
director at the UNT. The President, I think, is slowly coming around. Its
certainly not one of her main goals, you know, cutting the budget, and you
know, she has so many other things she is focusing on (laughs). Plus she has
only been here only a little over a year and a half you know. So at the state
of the university address is the first time I have heard her mention
sustainability. So now I see things are changing because you need to get that xxx
(word not clear) from the top. É.
Talking about institutional support for sustainability, this person
said:
Éwell,
for one I havenÕt really asked – the coke bottles, that was the first
thing I asked, that would cost the university money, and I learnt not to do
that (laughs). So I am much more cautious, of what I am doing – its like
– if I would want to go to Barnes and Noble and say – from now on
we are doing only organic cotton t-shirts, ThatÕs it. And all of the things you
sell in your store have to be made in America – they are not going to go
for that (laughs), I mean they are not, you know thatÕs crazy – but why
wouldnÕt you? Why wouldnÕt you buy American? Yes I understand it costs more
money, but in the long run – you know then we go back to whatever we are
doing in the long run, about keeping Americans workingÉ.
In
what appears to be a deviation-amplifying cycle, student sustainability
activists rely on administrators to push down sustainability initiatives, hence
easing the resistance they noted prior. However, those charged with working
towards a sustainable NMSU seek to leverage the interests of these same
students to drive sustainability, as one respondent indicated:
For one reason, the
President and the Provost, they have to listen to students, you know, they
donÕt have to listen to me, and especially if I am saying something that costs
them money, like when I asked... services to not use plastic bottles on campus,
I got into trouble, I mean four Directors shut me down (laughs), and said
(quotes), Òwe make money when we sell cokeÓ. But if those are students –
yeah, I am getting the students to do things that I canÕt doÉ
Similar
to the irony noted in the universityÕs lack of sustainable investment, answerability
for the sustainability initiatives at NMSU is traded-off among student
activists and those involved in sustainability initiatives. While perceptions of sustainability seem to be
inauthentic at NMSU, there is a glimpse of a path upon which NMSU could
continue to tread, eventually reaching its sustainable-authentic-potentiality
through an examination of the President's goals.
Potential for Change: Goals
Seeking out potential for change may begin with an
examination of the PresidentÕs goals. Visible to the students and crafted by
the administration, these goals could neutralize this deviation-amplifying
cycle. For instance, Goals 3 and 4 acknowledge that in order for NMSU to be
effective and efficient, it should also be sustainable. These are not mutually
exclusive labels; they can be one and the same. Sustainability, if considered
as the three-part ÔstoolÕ definition provided by one professor, would involve
consideration of NMSUÕs economic, environmental, and social equity health. This
direction tied into our later intervention and seemed to bode well for us,
garnering the response from the president that "Showing how
sustainability is related to the 7 building-the-vision goals was an effective
approach.Ó
Further in the PresidentÕs Goals-Goal 7: Culture of
Pride. Does sustainability not facilitate a culture of pride? The student
population certainly seems to think it may:
WeÕre forgetting our roots. WeÕre forgetting
where we come from, who we belong to. ItÕs like, weÕre so connected, and so
related to flowers, to trees, and we forget that. And we see more appeal to
technology and other things and stuff like that. I mean not to say itÕs not
important, not that it helps us. But at the same time there needs to be
balance. But I think that weÕre just going to fast and weÕre forgetting where
we come from. Who we are, and we just wanna
go, and just forget. And I think that we need our pasts, not more than
anything, but we need it.
A culture of pride with a focus on
sustainability would reassure these students that NMSU is not foregoing its
pasts in favor of bigger buildings and more money; it would suggest an
authentic care for the students themselves. This authentic care was on full
display when we later staged our intervention via a meeting with the President,
Provost, and Vice-President of Research.
Potential for Change: Eyewitness Testimony
Concluding
our intervention research, we met with the president and provost of our
university. The meeting was delayed because of an unusual change in the weather
patterns that have been occurring over the last few years. We chose to
interpret a delay in our meeting as "not a matter of chance but
rather" "grounded in the essential kind of being"(Heidegger
1996: 93) that is a shared heart of care. We shared this heart of care with the
Vice President of Research who suggested he may be
able to provide a staff person to work with our group and attend our meetings.
He was also positive about working on grants and identifying sustainability
researchers for the database. Following this conversation, the staff told us
that our meeting was to start.
The meeting began, and introductions
were made all around. The President
expressed high interest in receiving a copy of the report we were preparing
based upon interviews, transcripts, and document analysis with sustainability
leaders on campus. Though it may be interpreted positively we are aware that
"All the same,
under the leadership of the they, this tranquillized 'willing' does not signify that being
toward one's potentiality-for-being has been extinguished, but only that it has
been modified"(Heidegger 1996: 182). This ambiguity of acquiescence
reflects the ambiguity surrounding sustainability itself.
In
addition to the challenge of ambiguity, our intervention also exposed the
influence of the other. An administrator seemed to be lost in the other with
the question "has work on Talloires Declaration [reporting] been
completed?" This reflects what Heidegger (1996: 177) said: "Entangled
flight into the being-at-home of publicness is flight
from not-being-at-home, that is, from
... being-in-the-world entrusted to itself in its being. This ... threatens Its
everyday lostness in the they." Hence, while
there was an authentic attempt at leadership, the other led to a present-self
that does not recognize the scope of the behavior of the predecessor. Despite
these challenges, things went better than we could have hoped.
The
presentation seemed to hold interest. Comments made by the upper administration
during and after our intervention included a number of factors that reflect a
heart of care. The first remark by an upper administrator, with agreement all
around, ÒI really like the heart [of care] in the [sustainability] image."
This comment was made in reference to a chart placing sustainability in the
context of operations, community, education, and research, and focuses on the
overlapping synergies amongst them. This authentic interest in care and
community shows a reflection of authentic sustainability that Heidegger seems
to reference in saying "[F]ateful[nes].. exists as being-in-the-world in being-with others, its occurrence is an occurrence-with and is determined as destiny. With this term,
we designate the occurrence of the community, of a people. Destiny is not
composed of individual fates, nor can being-with-one-another be conceived of as
the mutual occurrence of several subjects." Having established the
authenticity of care amongst the top leaders of our university, we felt
emboldened to drive into an intervention describing the sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
We
explicated a sustainable-authentic-potentiality by presenting how
sustainability links with each of the seven goals of the university. This led
to an invitation of our group to present to a meeting of the Deans. Further,
the VP of Research invited us to present at a council meeting of those in
charge of university research. Our hope is that by gaining this access we will
be able to extend the intentional self of those beings, in their being, that we
encounter. As Heidegger (1996: 65) put it "What everyday association is
initially busy with is not tools themselves, but the
work. What is to be produced in each case is what is primarily taken care of
and is thus also what is at hand. The work bears the totality of references in
which useful things are encountered." Through these future meetings, we
hope to extend the tools of care. If we can extend the tools of care that are
encountered by these beings then they can utilize as ready-to-hand that which might
lead to a full sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
Discussion
While
the results of this case study are limited, it does provide implications for
those specifically interested in sustainability research as well as those
interested in strategy at a practical level.
First, this study highlights challenges to promoting
sustainability when multiple definitions of the topic exist. In our research, a
number of themes developed. Sustainability at NMSU involves a balancing of
competing needs: fiscal efficiency, caring (heart), and the institutionÕs brand
identity. In order to meaningfully implement sustainability at NMSU this
mismatch must be reconciled, which we achieve by providing a dialogical
polyphony of perspectives. Through
the process it is hoped that commonalities will emerge in which the competing
needs are not viewed as zero sum games.
Secondly,
at an ontological level, we found the existence of sustainability systems to be
Òontically-ontologically fabricated.Ó (Heidegger 1962). Sustainability can be viewed as a
potentiality-for-Being that is attested to by the caring and conscience of
those participating in system changes. There is a Ògenuinely existential
InterpretationÓ (Ibid, p. 277, caps in original) ongoing among those we
interviewed, as an authentic potentiality-for-Being intra-acts with an
inauthentic one. In short, sustainability is caring to make systems change, in
a community that Òwants to have a conscienceÓ (ibid, p. 277). The authentic
potentiality-for- Being brought forth by caring
contends with inauthentic potentiality. Our inquiry attempted to investigate
the Òprimordial BeingÓ of
sustainability-systems-wholeness as it is reaching toward its sustainable-authentic-potentiality
via a Òmode of careÓ (ibid, p. 277). For sustainability researchers, then, the
question is one of reconciling this primordial Being of sustainability with the
often inauthentic portrayals of sustainability. How
can researchers identify this duality and, more importantly, how can the mode
of care required for systems to reach their sustainability potential become the
focus of the system? Such a question can also be linked to strategy, as
decision-makers choose the authentic commitment to sustainability and a mode of
care over the inauthentic ÔgreenwashingÕ we found at
our University.
Indeed,
the entire process of this project also demonstrates a ÒspiralingÓ trajectory,
where the ontological feelings and epistemological perception of the status quo
of the environment motivate us to design effective policies to increase
sustainability at NMSU, which in turn may generate a new ontological sense and
epistemological perception of the sustainability efforts. The cycle, which
incorporates the ontological, ontic, and epistemological perspectives of
sustainability, will continue until the ÔdeathÕ of the entire system.
The
major take away from this article is a unified process that manifests as
sustainability, ethics, and entrepreneurship, as it is manifest through
leadership. This sustainable-authentic-potentiality process offers insights
regarding a number of works. In ethics, the work of Iedema
and Rhodes (2010) could be considered from a phenomenological stance as
advancing a motivation of care that is a sort of
surveillance-toward-sustainability, which itself is an essentially
entrepreneurial act. Further, the question of the ethics as bound up in
leaderly character that Wright and Quick (2011) speak to may be thought of as
one of many manifestations of ethical leadership which, as they imply,
incorporates a need for authenticity, but as our study implies, also requires
an entrepreneurial eye toward sustainability. For Helin
and Sandstršm (2010), the question of overcoming
resistance to ethical control may be situated as a process of entrepreneurial
leadership and powered restorying social-referents and expected outcomes as
either supporting or hindering sustainability.
Further,
the finding of a link between an ethical focus and firm performance found by
O'Boyle, Rutherford, and Pollack (2010), supports the fundamental process link
between sustainability and entrepreneurship and our paper adds to this that
sustainability is also an underlying facet of this finding. The leaderly
implications for the link between job stress-work motivation (Barney &
Elias 2010), across nations, has shown that ethical leadership is essential to
work performance; our study suggests that leaders looking to improve the job
stress work motivation relationship may do well to incorporate ethical
sustainability as an envisioned goal. Our work is in support of the findings of
Palazzo, Krings, and Hoffrage
(2012) that un-considered ways of being that are unethical but unnoticed. We
add to this that if the intentionality toward which actors moved was through
sustainability by utilizing an entrepreneurial mindset, then a temporary
breakdown would occur when unethical practices became manifest and thereby
unethical behaviors would become overt instead of remaining hidden.
The
second contribution, though, is to postmodern inquiry. Balogun,
Jarzabkowski, Mantere, and
Vaara, (2012) look at the discourse of strategy as practice
which is extended by our perspective as situating the ontological
practice of sustainable strategy as primordial to the epistemic discourse of
strategy and the epistemo-onto process of strategy. Warren and Smith (2012) re-stories entrepreneurship in a way that
could be seen, from our contribution, to be an exploration entrepreneurship as
a movement toward advancing the potentiality of an organization to become a
whole through sustainability. The removal of the epistemic barriers to
the ontological sustainable-authentic-potentiality process may combine with our
study to advance a methodology for attaining the outcome of ethical sustainable
entrepreneurship. Berglund and Wigren (2012) explore
the role of entrepreneurship in society if we turn their finding of
entrepreneurship into a means of advancing a sustainable response to the
repressive material conditions faced by those in entrepreneurial systems, then
we find a that authentic behavior is at the center of further advancement.
Our
interpretation of Lawler's (2012) investigation of restorying transitions for
leaders shows that the underlying process undertaken by an ethical leader
integrates intentionality toward and through suitability, entrepreneurially.
Watson (2012) exposes the dramaturgy of entrepreneurship, something we
interpret as an ontological upwelling of intentionality toward sustainable
development requiring an authentic leaderly stance. Beaven
and Jarrard (2012) see musicians as entrepreneurs, a
position that our findings strongly support, as institutional entrepreneurial
change through the identity, expenses of music are quintessential. Smith (2012)
creative entrepreneurial space, which we interpret as a penumbral region, that
stands between the renegade and institutional boundaries and ethically
integrated in sustainable leadership.
Reaching
sustainable-authentic-potentiality also increases peopleÕs working efficiency
in the system or organization (Lao, 1996; Tao and BSA, 2000). Thus, the care
for the environmental system at NMSU is also a positive interaction between the
environment and people where the environment acts tacitly and often naturally
whereas people act expressively. The crucial point is that such care has to
subject to the so-called Ònatural lawsÓ of the environment. Specifically, under
the assumption that the environment has the capacity to redress many of its own
problems, peopleÕs interventions should be aimed at reducing activities deemed
to undermine the environment.
Conclusion
Within
the movement towards sustainable-authentic-potentiality, there are places where
sustainability occurrences belong, in the totality of the context of
curriculum, research, and the very equipment of the university, placed in
concernful dealings with regions of the environment. A curriculum of concern
for the environment is the very foundation of what it means to be an Aggie. It makes
sense that an ontological sustainability should originate from this
agricultural university, given the importance of agricultural sustainability (Pretty, 1995; Tilman, Cassman,
Matson, Naylor, & Polasky, 2002). It is not only in knowing about sustainability, or practicing it for
its utility, but in the heart of care for all regions of the environment that
one is an Aggie, in an Òaround-ness of the environment" (Heidegger, 1962:
135) that is ready-to-hand to the generations that follow. An Aggie is
"within-the-environment" (ibid, 94) "not ontically
confined to its entities, or seeking its knowledge. ÔWorldhoodÕ is an
ontological concept and stands for the structure of one of the constitutive
items Being-in-the-worldÓ (ibid, 92). World is also an ontical concept and
signifies the totality of entities present-at-hand. It is also epistemic, a way
of knowing the world empathetically. Ontologically, we engage in usability,
serviceability and manipulability of the environment, all these in-order-to
dealings with the environment are more or less sustainable.
We
conclude that sustainability at NMSU is occurring in care and conscience as an
existential possibility that makes the two ontic associations (Figure 1):
ontico-ontological, and ontico-epistemic. The more difficult
epistemic-ontological ones that Barad (2007) conceives are in the relation of
discourse and materiality. The social discourses of sustainability are seeping
into the curriculum, into operations, and into administration. However, this is
not separate from materiality, such as from reducing, reusing, and recycling.
The discourse of sustainability and the materiality practices
intra-penetrate. This has major
implications for sustainability strategy as practice (Chia &
Holt, 2006).
The
heart of care is an important part of the ontological work upon which strategy
as practice is built (Chia, 2004). Administration prefers to be primary in the
creation of sustainability strategy because of this (Sandberg
& Tsoukas, 2011). The historicality of the change in organizational awareness of the
heart of care over the past one hundred, and particularly fifty, years has
allowed the complexity of the call to care to be appreciated (Tsoukas,
2005) by the strategic managers at NMSU. Without a
thorough review of this historicality and recognition of the individuals that
brought us to this place, this change in awareness and corresponding
intervention could not have occurred, as expected by the strategy as practice
literature (Chia &
MacKay, 2007). This strategy as practice is leading to changes in
curriculum inventories, research database construction and the university's
totality of involvement. These chances are reflective of this totality of
involvement in sustainability. Heidegger (1996) mentions this outcome when he
refers to for-having "As the appropriation of understanding in being that
understands, the interpretation operates in being toward a totality of
relevance which has already been understood." This implies there can be no
sustainability strategy without bringing the sustainable-authentic-potentiality
into being as ready-to-hand instead of simply present-at-hand.
We have made suggestions for a path to change
utilizing the PresidentÕs goals. We understand that that this may appear a
small step; however, turning a heart of care for sustainability from something
that is present-at-hand to something ready-to-hand allows us to influence the
UniversityÕs sustainable-authentic-potentiality. Our study and suggestions
sought to reconcile the mismatch between sustainability as promised and
sustainability as delivered by exploring the past, present, and future
characterizations of sustainability by those immersed in it. In doing so, we
drew out the authentic heart of care for sustainability present in various NMSU
facets and simultaneously identified inauthentic definitions of the topic.
While preliminary, this study could provide for the development of new
questions to be explored by further research into the relationship of systems,
sustainability, organizational change, and ontological storytelling. The
finality of our intervention study is that the university went towards its
sustainability potentiality, is not there yet, but has a glimpse of a vision of
its sustainable-authentic-potentiality.
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