Organisation profile

Sustainability has many facets. Inter- and transdisciplinary research and teaching characterize the School of Sustainability. Scientists in our research projects work together in the laboratory, on the heath, in the grassland, in the classroom, with the city administration, with farmers, with non-governmental organizations, with companies, with students in the lecture hall and of course at their desks.

Furthermore, we work with regional and national political actors, e.g. ministries, as well as international organizations, e.g. UNEP, UNESCO, EU. We are part of national and international bodies, e.g. sustainability advisory boards of companies, member of the German Sustainability Award, World Biodiversity Council (IPBES), in order to contribute to social change with scientific findings.

Main research areas

Vision
Sustainability science investigates on a theoretical, conceptual and empirical level how to promote sustainable development and how to find and implement effective solutions for current social and ecological challenges. The aim is to create a more sustainable future.

Sustainability researchers are called upon to take responsibility for their research, which is anchored in existing scientific knowledge and methods and serves to make the world a better place for everyone.

Mission
We promote change towards a sustainable future by developing theories, concepts and practices of inclusive education for sustainability, research, governance and management.

We acknowledge the diversity and dynamics of values, norms and behaviour and contribute with transdisciplinary methods to ensuring that tensions and differences between different disciplines, methods, topics and standards are fruitfully taken up and used with productive compromises and further developments towards sustainable development.

Principles
The School of Sustainability is guided by the normative concepts of ecological system integrity and social and economic justice.

Ecological system integrity refers to the safeguarding of life-support systems, as well as the maintenance of the well-being of life on Earth.

With social and economic justice we strive for a world in which all people can fulfil their potential without endangering system integrity and the well-being of others.

Information about the School
The School of Sustainability includes...
... ca. 25 professors
... ca. 100 research assistants
... ca. 1000 students in Bachelor and Master courses

In various inter- and transdisciplinary projects we are constantly researching and working together on changes and solutions for current challenges.

  1. Published

    Pennycress-corn double-cropping increases ground beetle diversity

    Groeneveld, J. H. & Klein, A. M., 01.06.2015, In: Biomass and Bioenergy. 77, p. 16-25 10 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  2. Published

    Tree diversity alters the structure of a tri-trophic network in a biodiversity experiment

    Staab, M., Blüthgen, N. & Klein, A. M., 01.07.2015, In: Oikos. 124, 7, p. 827-834 8 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsOther (editorial matter etc.)Research

  3. Published

    Grassland management intensification weakens the associations among the diversities of multiple plant and animal taxa

    Manning, P., Gossner, M. M., Bossdorf, O., Allan, E., Zhang, Y. Y., Prati, D., Blüthgen, N., Boch, S., Böhm, S., Börschig, C., Hölzel, N., Jung, K., Klaus, V. H., Klein, A. M., Kleinebecker, T., Krauss, J., Lange, M., Müller, J., PAŠALIć, E., Socher, S. A., Tschapka, M., Türke, M., Weiner, C., Werner, M., Gockel, S., Hemp, A., Renner, S. C., Wells, K., Buscot, F., Kalko, E. K. V., Linsenmair, K. E., Weisser, W. W. & Fischer, M., 01.06.2015, In: Ecology. 96, 6, p. 1492-1501 10 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  4. Published

    Red mason bees cannot compete with honey bees for floral resources in a cage experiment

    Hudewenz, A. & Klein, A. M., 11.2015, In: Ecology and Evolution. 5, 21, p. 5049-5056 8 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  5. Published

    Spatial scale affects seed predation and dispersal in contrasting anthropogenic landscapes

    Pufal, G. & Klein, A. M., 12.2015, In: Basic and Applied Ecology. 16, 8, p. 726-736 11 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  6. Published

    Estimation of baseflow and water transfer in karst catchments in Mediterranean Turkey by nonlinear recession analysis

    Eris, E. & Wittenberg, H., 01.11.2015, In: Journal of Hydrology. 530, p. 500-507 8 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  7. Published

    Watermills in the historic irrigation system 'Palmeral de Elche', Spain: An example of early hydropower exploitation

    Melendez-Pastor, I., Pedreño, J. N. & Wittenberg, H., 08.06.2015, In: Water Supply. 15, 5, p. 1140-1151 12 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  8. Published

    What restricts generative rejuvenation of Calluna vulgaris in continental, dry heathland ecosystems: Seed production, germination ability or safe site conditions?

    Henning, K., Von Oheimb, G. & Sabine, T., 10.07.2015, In: Ecological Questions. 21, p. 25-28 4 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  9. Published

    Resolving potential conflicts between different heathland ecosystem services through adaptive management

    Alonso, I. & Härdtle, W., 14.07.2015, In: Ecological Questions. 21, p. 101-103 3 p.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

  10. Published

    Telomere length is a strong predictor of foraging behavior in a long-lived seabird

    Young, R. C., Kitaysky, A. S., Barger, C. P., Dorresteijn, I., Ito, M. & Watanuki, Y., 01.03.2015, In: Ecosphere. 6, 3, 26 p., 39.

    Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

Recently viewed

Researchers

  1. Lena Holz

Publications

  1. Rivals in arms
  2. What makes communication ‘organizational’? How the many voices of a collectivity become the one voice of an organization
  3. Color
  4. Chronik der Familie
  5. Museumslandschaft im Wandel
  6. Political orientations do not cancel out, and politics is not about truth
  7. Ein Modell der benutzerorientierten Qualitätssicherung für Ist-Zustandsbeschreibung und Anforderungsspezifikation von kommerziellen Anwendungssystemen
  8. Homo sapiens reached the higher latitudes of Europe by 45,000 years ago
  9. Übersetzung: Karl Holl von Heinrich Assel
  10. Mandelic acid derived ionic liquids
  11. Flexible Arbeitszeiten
  12. New Keywords
  13. The First Steps of Blended Mobility in European Higher Education
  14. Kunsterziehungsbewegung
  15. Geschäftsführung ohne Auftrag (§§ 677-687)
  16. Agenturen und Integrierte Kommunikation
  17. Zum Verhältnis formellen und informellen Lernens in der frühen Adoleszenz
  18. Determinants of trade union membership in Western Germany
  19. Competition, unfair
  20. Beschränktes Alkoholverkaufsverbot in Baden-Württemberg
  21. Der Ökowald als Baustein einer Klimaschutzstrategie
  22. Self-directed racialized humor as in-group marker among migrant players in a professional football team
  23. Warum brauchen wir eine Forschungsethik? Moralisches Entscheiden
  24. Rhetorik der Kreativität
  25. Waveboard fahren in der Schule: Herausforderung und Chance
  26. Vom Konsens zum Dissens?
  27. Praxiskommentar
  28. Wie wirkt die FDS-Intervention auf die Entwicklung des Emotionswissens der Kinder?
  29. Armut und Reichtum
  30. Ecosystem Services Justice
  31. Six modes of co-production for sustainability
  32. The influence of feedback and awareness of consequences on the development of corporate sustainability action over time
  33. Cradle to Cradle The new Recycling Quality