Abstract

The transformation for sustainability requires a paradigm shift towards systems thinking and interdisciplinary collaboration, which entails, above all, a process of cultural change affecting individual mindsets, organizations and society as a whole. Sustainability in higher education institutions (HEIs) has been a recurrent research field in the past decades. However, little attention has been paid to the processes of internal and cultural change and, in particular, to the first steps to prepare academic communities for change. Understanding “readiness for change” as a core organizational competency to overcome continuous environmental changes and considering the diluted hierarchy at HEIs, this article proposes the adoption of dialogical and developmental approaches in a single action case, the SDGs Seminars at the Universidad Politécnica de Madrid. This methodology was used to diagnose organizational and individual readiness for change considering cognitive, affective and behavioural components, and to identify consequences in organizational structures and culture. Our findings reveal that reframing dialogical spaces in HEIs to experience a collaborative and sustainability culture can unlock change, breaking down organizational silos, reducing resistances and engaging academic communities in the cocreation of institutional strategies. Furthermore, the case suggests that acting at the group level has impacts both on the individual and institutional levels.

Highlights

  • The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development [1] requires a paradigm shift towards systems thinking, collaboration and interdisciplinarity [2]

  • The following subsections present the main results of the SDGs Seminars programme from October 2018 to March 2020

  • Following a learning by doing approach, the strategy intended to create suitable conditions for faculty and researchers to learn how to collaborate by collaborating by means of the alignment of their research to the SDGs

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Summary

Introduction

The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development [1] requires a paradigm shift towards systems thinking, collaboration and interdisciplinarity [2] This transformation entails, above all, a process of cultural change which affects individual mindsets, organizations and society as a whole [3,4,5]. Higher education institutions (HEIs) are not an exception and should transform their organizational structure, culture and communication practices in order to overcome disciplinary and sectoral boundaries [2,6] Their highly fragmented and monodisciplinary structures inherited from the 19th century, as well as a conservative and competitive culture which encourages individualism, hierarchy, incrementalism, bureaucracy and marketoriented strategies [7,8,9,10,11], hinder internal and external collaborative potential [12,13]. Their response to societal needs is slowed down [14].

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