The summer bushfire crisis has provided a springboard for an Australian university’s plan to adopt “planetary health” as an underpinning rationale of everything it does.
The governing council at Victoria University has given in-principle approval for a plan to embed planetary health, which examines human health through the prism of the natural systems that sustain life, across the entire suite of the university’s activities.
Deputy vice-chancellor Corinne Reid said the initiative could be as redefining for Victoria as its decision to import the “block teaching” model from Canada and Sweden. And as with block teaching, Victoria plans to take the idea to a level unmatched anywhere else.
Global academia has embraced planetary health since the idea was??five years ago by?The Lancet?and the Rockefeller Foundation. The Planetary Health Alliance, a?of almost 90 academic and research institutions and dozens more government and non-government agencies, boasts members in every populated continent, including eight in Australia.
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The University of Sydney??for appointing the world’s first professor of planetary health in 2016, and many courses and research groups pursue a planetary health mantra. But Professor Reid said Victoria would be the first institution to inculcate the principle throughout its teaching, research, outreach and estate management.
“We as a whole institution are committing to this path,” she said. “It’s not just about having a sustainability officer with a passion. We will embed this in everything we do – our thinking, our policy revision, our strategic planning. It’s layered through every document coming out of our organisation.”
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Professor Reid said the university would spend the coming months “laying out plans” for the initiative. “It’s something we’re developing from the bottom up,” she said. Two forums to workshop ideas, where Professor Reid expected perhaps a few dozen staff, each attracted 130. Another meeting, staged to invite applications for the A$1 million (?505,000) VU has set aside for an internal grant round, netted 100 researchers.
While A$1 million is not a huge amount of money, it commands attention “in the context of our institution”, Professor Reid said. “This is what we can afford and that’s part of being a sustainable university.”
She said the concept had resonated in the marginalised communities of Melbourne’s west, where Victoria is based. “The moral purpose of VU is about working with disadvantaged communities”, where climate change has a “differential impact” and green space is not plentiful, she said. “Most of the west of Melbourne has an industrial heritage which doesn’t fit itself well to the health and well-being of its community.”
The deadly summer bushfires that choked Melbourne with the world’s worst air had rammed the message home. “A term like planetary health can feel vague or nebulous,” Professor Reid said. “Moments like that really bring it to our doorstep. When it is anchored to something you are watching out your window, that you are experiencing when you breathe, it helps give a sense of reality.”
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