- highlight the central role of education and learning - for all people, of all ages, in both developing and developed countries - in the common pursuit of sustainable development (SD)
- facilitate links and networking, exchange, and interaction among stakeholders in education for sustainable development (ESD)
- provide a space and opportunity for refining and promoting the vision of, and transition to, SD - through all forms of learning and public awareness
- foster increased quality of teaching and learning in ESD
- develop strategies at every level to strengthen capacity in ESD.
The DESD is a grand, decade-long undertaking involving activities developed and carried out at local, national, regional, and international levels - with a particular eye toward "the degree of change in attitude and behaviour in the lives of communities and individuals at the local level." These changes are understood as involving 3 key areas of SD - society, environment, and economy - with culture as an underlying dimension. With regard to the latter, organisers note that "The values, diversity, knowledge, languages and worldviews associated with culture strongly influence the way issues of education for sustainable development are dealt with in specific national contexts. In this sense, culture is just not a collection of particular manifestations (song, dance, dress, ...), but a way of being, relating, behaving, believing and acting".
Each year of the Decade, a theme will be adopted to give particular shape to the activities undertaken; possibilities include: sustainable consumption, cultural diversity, health and quality of life, water and energy, biosphere reserves as places of learning, world heritage sites as places of learning, ESD in the knowledge society, citizen participation and good governance, poverty reduction and SD, and intergenerational justice and ethics.
In this context, stakeholders will apply the following 7 strategies both in their own institutional frameworks and in the networks and alliances in which they function:
Clearly, broad participation among many stakeholders at multiple levels will be central to this large-scale effort. To cite only one example, the Baha'is of the USA, in collaboration with several faith-based organisations (FBOs) and the US Partnership for the DESD, convened a strategic consultation on developing strategies for engaging faith-based communities on the day of the international DESD launch. The DESD website, in English, French, and Spanish, is one tool designed to foster communication and collaboration between and among these and other participants in the initiative - and to expose members of the global public to the messages and meanings of the DESD.
Education, Sustainable Development.
The following understanding of ESD informs the communication strategies developed to support the Decade: "Education enables us to understand ourselves and others and our links with the wider natural and social environment, and this understanding serves as a durable basis for building respect. Along with a sense of justice, responsibility, exploration and dialogue, ESD aims to move us to adopting behaviours and practices that enable all to live a full life without being deprived of basics." That said, organisers explain that, because there is no universal model of ESD, "there will be nuanced differences according to local contexts, priorities and approaches....The goals, emphases and processes must, therefore, be locally defined to meet the local environmental, social and economic conditions in culturally appropriate ways."
Organisers emphasise the linkages between ESD and both the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) on universal primary education for both boys and girls (especially girls) as well as the Dakar Framework for Action on Education for All (EFA). "The creation of a gender-sensitive education system at all levels and of all types - formal, non-formal and informal - to reach the unserved is emphasized as a crucial component of education for sustainable development."