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Graduates who want to save the earth are studying courses to show them how, says Claire Smith, The Independent.
"I wanted a career that wasn't just about making money; I never
wanted a job that I wasn't going to be passionate about," says
25-year-old Tamar Bourne, who's working towards a Masters in leadership
for sustainable development at Forum for the Future, a London-based NGO
that advises business and government agencies on how to be more
sustainable in their practice.
With an undergraduate degree in environmental management and policy
from the London School of Economics, Bourne is one of hundreds of
postgraduate students across Britain opting for a masters degree with a
conscience - degrees in sustainable development, holistic science and
human ecology, that will help shape them, and shape the world.
The numbers are growing, says Dr Charlie Ball, the labour-market
information officer from Graduate Prospects: "There are 14 per cent
more students enrolled on these environmental masters courses than at
this time last year."
The Forum for the Future masters - which is validated by Middlesex
University - aims to create future leaders of think-tanks, policy
advisors, and civil servants who will stop and think about social
justice, ethical practice and the needs of future generations before
they make decisions.
Bourne, who spent part of her gap year working for the Iracambi
Research and Conservation Centre in the rainforests of Brazil, hopes
that the Forum for the Future MProf will enable her to influence
environmental policy.
"Before I went I was quite naive," she admits. "I didn't realise they
were chopping the rainforest down because of bigger pressures."
Bourne came face to face with the Amazon' s Catholic farmers, who cut
down the forest to create more arable land to divide up for their large
families. She also witnessed the disastrous effects of coffee
plantations, which ravage the soil and render it infertile after five
to 10 years. "It made me realise I wanted to know more about policy and
global systems so that I could think about ways that, as a British
person, I could make a difference; rather than just going over there
and telling them to 'Stop it!'"
But though it was in Brazil that she realised that she wanted to be
more than a tree-hugger, it still puzzles her why some people are
driven to make a difference, while other people just want to drive
faster cars.
"We've thought a lot about that on our course," says Bourne. "We think
we've narrowed it down to experience gained from travelling; inspiring
teachers at school; growing up in rural communities and learning to
value the environment from an early age."
Liz White, the sustainability advisor from Forum for the Future thinks
there are two key driving forces: "Firstly they want to change the
society they are part of, and secondly they want a more satisfying
personal role for themselves."
She points to recent research that illustrates how people in the
industrialised west are no more happy than they were in the past, even
though their wealth is growing.
White believes that, if this unhappiness is in some way related to the
loss of social cohesion, environmental quality of life, and the huge
disparities in wealth between the West and the rest of the world, then
an education and, subsequently, a fulfilling career which is about more
than just a pay-packet, can help to right this trend.
To meet the increasing demand, according to Graduate Prospects, there
are now 74 masters programmes across the UK that have sustainable
development elements.
In Scotland, for example, there is the MSc in human ecology, which is
run in partnership by the Centre for Human Ecology in Edinburgh and the
department of geography and sociology at the University of Strathclyde.
The Centre for Human Ecology carries out research, education and action
for those wanting to make changes in the world of ecological
sustainability and social justice, says Osbert Lancaster, its director.
"I think we've come to realise that the satisfaction that politicians
and consumerism promise is a myth. Of course we have basic needs, but
without healthy relationships with other people and the world around
us, and a sense of self-worth and identity, we are not fully human and
cannot be really happy."
Curiously, Lancaster has found that many of the students who come to
him aren't really looking for a postgraduate course as such at all.
Rather, they have been involved in environmental or social campaigning
for some time and find that the Centre for Human Ecology degree helps
them to work out how they can best be effective.
Of course, the increase in courses on offer is not only to meet student
demand. Andy Johnston, the head of education and learning at Forum for
the Future, highlights how this move towards sustainability is coming
from the top: "The current socio-political model is not coping well
with the challenges that the world is facing."
Liz White goes on to explain how, "in the future, companies and
organisations will demand the types of skills and knowledge from their
potential employees that, previously, only people on sustainable
development degrees would have."
To meet this need, White hopes to see sustainability integrated into
all higher education courses, so that a graduate of any discipline - be
it engineering, tourism, or history of art - will know how to
contribute to sustainable development within their profession.
Professor Brian Goodwin, who runs the MSc in holistic science programme
at Schumacher College in Devon would like to see universities
themselves become more sustainable. "Universities have become
terminally irrelevant to society," he says. "Of course, they're where
careers are made, but students should be integrating with society,
spending more time in job placements than in the ivory tower, so that
they can both contribute to civil society and learn from it."
This is already a part of Forum for the Future's course. Their students
are sent out for six months' work experience in six different sectors:
NGOs, local government, politics, business, finance regulation and the
media. It is training that helps them overcome that "lack of work
experience" headache that can face so many graduates.
According to Dr Ball, graduates with degrees in sustainable development
are snapped up quickly by employers - many finding highly paid jobs. He
says that "about 75 per cent of environmental Masters graduates go
straight into the workforce after graduating, with the rest doing
further study or, perhaps not surprisingly, taking themselves off
travelling."
Recent graduates from Forum for the Future include the senior policy
officer to the Africa policy department at the UK's Department for
International Development, the senior policy adviser for Christian Aid,
the head of strategy at Demos, the sustainability manager at BAA, and
the policy adviser for Traidcraft, while others have used the degrees
to start NGOs. Joanne Baker, a long-time campaigner in human and
environmental rights, graduated with an MSc in human ecology and then
founded Child Victims of War, in response to the humanitarian tragedy
in Iraq.
Bourne's dream job is to work for the Institute for European
Environment Policy. "I'm passionate and hopeful," she says. "I want to
make some difference, but I know saving the world is far too big for
one person."
from the Independent, 9 June 2005 |