Higher education institutions have a mandate to serve the public good, yet in many cases fail to adequately respond to the global climate crisis. The inability of academic institutions to commit to purposeful climate action through targeted research, education, outreach, and policy is due in large part to “capture” by special interests. Capture involves powerful minority interests that exert influence and derive benefits at the expense of a larger group or purpose. This paper makes a conceptual contribution to advance a framework of “academic capture” applied to the climate crisis in higher education institutions. Academic capture is the result of the three contributing factors of increasing financialization issues, influence of the fossil fuel industry, and reticence of university employees to challenge the status quo. The framework guides an empirical assessment evaluating eight activities and related indices of transparency and participation based on principles of climate justice and the growing democracy-climate nexus. The framework can be a helpful tool for citizens and academics to assess the potential for academic capture and capacity for more just and democratic methods of climate action in higher education. We conclude with a series of recommendations on how to refine and apply our framework and assessment in academic settings. Our goal is to further the discussion on academic capture and continue to develop tools that transform higher education institutions to places of deep democracy and innovative climate education, research, and outreach to meet the challenges of the Anthropocene.

Lachapelle, P., Belmont, P., Grasso, M., Mccann, R., Gouge, D., Husch, J., et al. (2024). Academic capture in the Anthropocene: a framework to assess climate action in higher education. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 177(3 (March 2024)) [10.1007/s10584-024-03696-4].

Academic capture in the Anthropocene: a framework to assess climate action in higher education

Grasso M.;
2024

Abstract

Higher education institutions have a mandate to serve the public good, yet in many cases fail to adequately respond to the global climate crisis. The inability of academic institutions to commit to purposeful climate action through targeted research, education, outreach, and policy is due in large part to “capture” by special interests. Capture involves powerful minority interests that exert influence and derive benefits at the expense of a larger group or purpose. This paper makes a conceptual contribution to advance a framework of “academic capture” applied to the climate crisis in higher education institutions. Academic capture is the result of the three contributing factors of increasing financialization issues, influence of the fossil fuel industry, and reticence of university employees to challenge the status quo. The framework guides an empirical assessment evaluating eight activities and related indices of transparency and participation based on principles of climate justice and the growing democracy-climate nexus. The framework can be a helpful tool for citizens and academics to assess the potential for academic capture and capacity for more just and democratic methods of climate action in higher education. We conclude with a series of recommendations on how to refine and apply our framework and assessment in academic settings. Our goal is to further the discussion on academic capture and continue to develop tools that transform higher education institutions to places of deep democracy and innovative climate education, research, and outreach to meet the challenges of the Anthropocene.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Climate justice; Democracy-climate nexus; Fossil fuel industry; Greenwashing; Higher education; Participation; Transparency;
English
26-feb-2024
2024
177
3 (March 2024)
40
open
Lachapelle, P., Belmont, P., Grasso, M., Mccann, R., Gouge, D., Husch, J., et al. (2024). Academic capture in the Anthropocene: a framework to assess climate action in higher education. CLIMATIC CHANGE, 177(3 (March 2024)) [10.1007/s10584-024-03696-4].
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
Lachapelle-2024-Climate Change-VoR.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia di allegato: Publisher’s Version (Version of Record, VoR)
Licenza: Creative Commons
Dimensione 853.18 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
853.18 kB Adobe PDF Visualizza/Apri

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/467518
Citazioni
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
Social impact